Preamble

The House met at Eleven o'clock

PRAYERS

[Mr. SPEAKER in the Chair]

QUESTION OF PRIVILEGE

Mr. Speaker: Sir Douglas Glover.

Sir Douglas Glover: The matter which I wish to raise and on which I wish to submit a proposition to you, Mr. Speaker, I raise with a good deal of sorrow and in humility. I would have preferred to raise it on Monday but the Rules of the House preclude this. If the matter was not raised this morning, it would be time barred, and, therefore, it must be raised at the earliest opportunity and not at the earliest convenient opportunity. I believe that the matter which I wish to put before you represents a grave contempt of this House and there is, therefore, in me a good deal of anger at the occurrence which I wish to recount to you.
I ought, I think, to give a little explanation. From time to time, this House appoints Select Committees. In my submission, those Select Committees are this House in miniature, having the same powers, privileges and protection as the House itself, and when the House appoints those Select Committees it gives them that understanding.
Yesterday, a Sub-Committee of the Select Committee on Education and Science, consisting, I believe, of five hon. Members, went to Essex University, having arranged to go there to take and collect evidence to bring before this House on the subject of higher education. It is reported to me that the Sub-Committee, when its members arrived, went into a meeting with students which, I gather, was in a fairly exuberant, if not riotous, condition when the meeting began.
Whether it was because of the way the meeting was conducted I have not been able to ascertain, but, shortly, the papers that were on the table in front of the Members of Parliament were scattered, I understand that the microphone was thrown out of the window, the table was

overturned and some of the members of the Sub-Committee were physically manhandled and certainly were victims of a great deal of verbal assault.
I understand that as a result of this occurrence, the Select Committee has agreed that it will take elsewhere the evidence which it wishes to collect. It seems to me that the students of Essex University have deprived the Select Committee of this House of its opportunity to carry out the duty laid upon it by the House. I submit that it is a grave contempt of the House and is a prima facie case of breach of privilege, and I should like you so to rule.

Mr. Gilbert Longden: I was the Chairman of the Sub-Committee in question. My hon. Friend the Member for Ormskirk (Sir D. Glover) did not tell me that he was raising this as a matter of privilege, and the first I knew about it was by listening to the 8 o'clock news. I therefore have not had an opportunity of consulting my colleagues.
My own respectful opinion is that the House should not elevate this trivial affair into a portentous issue of privilege. [HON. MEMBERS: "Hear, hear."] The young man who scattered the papers was obviously the tool of others and, equally obviously, a "nut" case who should be in hospital. It seems a pity to spend large sums on educating graduate "nuts". The real targets for the displeasure of the House, if it wants a target, are the 50 or 60 ill-mannered and foul-mouthed men and women who prevented their own Vice-Chancellor and five of his distinguished academic colleagues from giving evidence.
I read in one of the morning papers that a university spokesman describes the incident as "regrettable". Perhaps that is one reason why these things go on. I think that the President of the National Union of Students was nearer the mark in describing it as "intolerable and inexcusable". I respectfully suggest, none the less, that the House should leave these people, who are not by any means typical of the students at Essex University—very far from it—to be dealt with by the university authorities.

Several Hon. Members: Several Hon. Members rose—

Mr. Speaker: Order. We cannot debate a submission.

Mr. Charles Pannell: I wish to make a submission to you, Mr. Speaker, within the hearing at least of the Deputy Leader of the House, that this raises a matter of what happens to peripatetic Sub-Committees which may be in all parts of the country, not to say all parts of the globe, and how far they can be protected by privilege. In the light of what the Chairman of the Sub-Committee has said, with which I agree, I wonder whether this is a matter not for the normal channels, but is a new situation which the House should consider. But for the present, I hope that the House will consider its dignity by not bothering too much about any indignity that may be put on another Sub-Committee.

Mr. Christopher Price: Mr. Christopher Price (Birmingham, Perry Barr) rose—

Mr. Speaker: Order. We cannot debate the submission which has been made to me.

Sir Edward Boyle: On a point of order. I believe that the comments made by the Chairman of the Sub-Committee, my hon. Friend the Member for Hertfordshire, South-West (Mr. Longden), command considerable sympathy and support in this House. I wonder whether, in the light of those remarks—I do not wish to go out of order—my hon. Friend the Member for Ormskirk (Sir D. Glover) will consider withdrawing the submission that he has made.

Mr. Speaker: Order. I am afraid that that cannot be done.
I am grateful to the hon. Member for Ormskirk (Sir D. Glover) for giving me notice, late last night, that he wished to raise this matter today. In accordance wih the usual practice, I will consider the submission that he has made and rule on it on Monday after Questions.

Mr. C. Pannell: On a point of order. With respect, Mr. Speaker, there is nothing to stop the House deciding here and now that it is contempt of the House and passing straight on. It does not need Mr. Speaker in this at all.

Mr. Speaker: Order. The practice of the House on matters of privilege is that I should take time to consider the submission.

Orders of the Day — PUBLIC HEALTH (RECURRING NUISANCES) BILL

(changed from Public Health Act (Amendment) Bill)

As amended (in the Standing Committee), considered.

11.13 a.m.

Mr. Speaker: There are no amendments for consideration. Third Reading what day?

Mr. W. A. Wilkins: On a point of order. Do I understand that, as a result of recent changes in our Standing Orders, the sponsor of a Private Member's Bill is not permitted to put the Bill before the House, recommend it to the House, and speak to us about what he intends that it should do?

Mr. Speaker: The Order that the House has adopted is that, unless there is a negative Motion on the Order Paper saying that the Bill should not be proceeded with on Third Reading, there is no Third Reading debate.
There are no Amendments for consideration.

Motion made, and Question, That the Bill be now read the Third time, put forthwith pursuant to Standing Order No. 55 (Third Reading), and agreed to.

Bill accordingly read the Third time, and passed.

DIVORCE REFORM BILL

As amended (in the Standing Committee), considered.

11.15 a.m.

Mr. Speaker: Order. I have posted up, as is my wont, the Amendments which I have selected for consideration.
The first Amendment is new Clause 1—
'(Decree to be refused in certain circumstances)'
with which I propose that we take new Clause 6—"Comparative hardship"—plus Amendment No. 14, in page 2, line 10, Clause 2, leave out '4' and insert:
'(Decree to be refused in certain circumstances)'


and Amendment No. 20, in page 3, line 36, leave out Clause 4.

Mr. Leo Abse: On a point of order. I wonder whether I might commend to you, Mr. Speaker, that we take new Clause 9—"Voluntary restriction of divorce"—and Amendment No. 10, in page 2, line 3, Clause 2, at end insert:
(2) The court shall not hold the marriage to have broken down irretrievably if the respondent satisfies the court

(a) that the marriage was entered into after the commencement of this Act by a religious ceremony;
(b) that notwithstanding subsection 1 above, granting the petition would conflict with tenets of the religion according to the rites of which the marriage ceremony took place; and
(c) that both the petitioner and the respondent knew, at the time of the marriage, of the relevant tenets of the religion concerned.

together as they both deal with the principle whether a marriage in certain but different circumstances should be indissoluble, the principle against which is the same?

Mr. Speaker: Order. The usual request I receive is for hon. Members to want more to be selected than fewer or fewer to be grouped. The matter for selection and grouping, however, is for the Chair.

New Clause 1

DECREE TO BE REFUSED IN CERTAIN CIRCUMSTANCES

The respondent to a petition for divorce may oppose the grant of a decree nisi on the ground that the dissolution of the marriage will result in grave financial or other hardship to him and that it would in all the circumstances be wrong to dissolve the marriage; and if the respondent does so and if apart from this section a decree nisi would be granted, the court shall consider all the circumstances, including the conduct of the parties to the marriage and the interests of those parties and of any children or other persons concerned, and if the court is of opinion that the dissolution of the marriage will result in grave financial or other hardship to the respondent and that it would be wrong in all the circumstances to dissolve the marriage it shall dismiss the petition.

For the purposes of this section hardship shall include the loss of the chance of acquiring any thing which the respondent might acquire if the marriage were not dissolved.—[Mr. Alec Jones.]

Brought up, and read the First time.

Mr. Alec Jones: I beg to move, That the Clause be read a Second time.
If this new Clause is carried—and I sincerely hope that it will be—it will replace Clause 4 and strengthen the provisions which that Clause contained.
In Committee the hon. and learned Member for Oldham, West (Mr. Bruce Campbell) raised the question whether Clause 4 allowed a respondent to oppose a decree nisi on the ground that grave financial or other hardship may be caused to the respondent.
As was made clear by my hon. Friend the Member for Coventry, South (Mr. William Wilson), this was always the intention of the sponsors of the Bill. Therefore, new Clause 1 seeks to fulfil that undertaking which we gave in Committee to meet the point raised by the hon. and learned Member for Oldham, West and other hon. Members.
New Clause 1 has been completely redrafted to make quite clear, first, that the respondent may oppose the granting of a divorce
on the ground that the dissolution of the marriage will result in grave financial or other hardship to him and that it would in all the circumstances be wrong to dissolve the marriage …
Secondly, if this defence is raised, that,
the court shall consider all the circumstances … and if the court is of opinion that the dissolution of the marriage will result in grave financial or other hardship to the respondent and that it would be wrong in all the circumstances to dissolve the marriage it shall dismiss the petition.
The basis of the defence and the facts upon which the court must be satisfied have now been spelt out. The words "be wrong" have been used instead of "not be proper". So we would define the basis of the court's approach, as it appears to the sponsors and to the draftsman, to be more appropriate in this form. We feel that it is better for the court to be enjoined to be satisfied positively of a particular quality rather than to be satisfied that a course of action is not proper.
The wording of the new Clause will, I believe and hope, be helpful when a respondent wife satisfies the court that, without fault on her part, she would otherwise be divorced and be deprived of a pension should her husband pre-decease her. In effect, her case of hardship is


that she has been deprived of the chance of a pension. Therefore, the last sentence of the new Clause is added to ensure that this loss of her chance can be regarded as a hardship. Without such a provision it might be held that it is not the dissolution of the marriage alone which deprives her of her pension for in fact she may not survive her husband.
Amendments Nos. 14 and 20 are purely drafting Amendments. I trust that the hon. and learned Member for Oldham, West will agree that we have met the valid and important point raised by him. I should like to express my appreciation to him for raising the point.
I commend new Clause 1 to the House.

Sir Lionel Heald: I beg to move—

Mr. Speaker: Order. I have not selected the right hon. and learned Member's Amendment to be moved. I have selected it to be discussed. The right hon. and learned Member can, however, talk about his Amendment in the debate.

Sir L. Heald: I should like to begin by expressing my appreciation, which I am sure will be shared by others who were on the Standing Committee, for the action of the sponsors in putting forward this new Clause. I hope they will not think it discourteous of me to say that we very much welcome this new atmosphere, because it did not have anything of this kind in Committee.
It is important to begin by recognising why it is that this kind of approach is more appropriate. It should be remembered that as the Bill originally stood—and we are to take out Clause 4 and replace it by this new Clause—it was not clear what the wording was all about. It did not say that this kind of objection could be raised by way of a defence, and that was not satisfactory. It appeared to say that as a precondition, or as a condition precedent to the court considering whether it would be right, or proper, or wrong, or whatever word one likes to use, to grant the divorce, the respondent had to show that the dissolution would result in grave financial or other hardship to him. As was said by several hon. Members, that is a difficult question, and it would be very difficult for the court in the first instance to decide what was meant by grave financial or other hardship.
We now have this improvement that it is the allegation of the respondent which gives rise to this machinery. Unfortunately, though, we find in line 7 that we still have this condition precedent in another form, because if there is to be any successful defence to the application for the decree the court must find that the dissolution of the marriage would result in grave financial or other hardship to the respondent, and the court can take the position of the children into account only if it makes that finding.
I know that my hon. Friends will wish to speak on this matter, because powerful arguments were put forward in relation to it. I want, in the first instance, to outline the objection that we still have, and to say with all respect to the sponsors of the Bill that they have not met the point.
I shall not anticipate what I know my hon. and learned Friend the Member for Oldham, West (Mr. Bruce Campbell) will deal with. It was pointed out in the Committee that there might be cases in which, if one is to interpret the words "grave financial hardship" in anything like a literal sense, it would not be possible to prove it, but, at the same time, from the point of view of the children there might be strong reasons for thinking that in all the circumstances it would be wrong to dissolve the marriage.
What we propose to do is to say that it is not necessary to prove that the respondent would suffer grave financial hardship, that it is sufficient to insert the words "or any child" to show that the child is affected. The consequence of that would be that we would not include the second reference to grave financial or other hardship to the respondent. If the Amendment were accepted, the Clause would read:
… and if the court is of opinion that it would be wrong in all the circumstances to dissolve the marriage it shall dismiss the petition.
The sponsors of the Bill have said that the court shall consider all the circumstances. Surely the proper thing is to ask whether, "in all the circumstances", that would be wrong? Instead of that there is put on the court this substantial limitation that it has to be proved to the satisfaction of the court that the dissolution of the marriage will result—not even may, but will—in grave financial or other hardship.
I do not want to enlarge on the argument, because there are several facets to it. I do not want it to be thought that we are being churlish about this, because we welcome this much more satisfactory approach. I have heard various people who have different views about the matter express appreciation of the fact that it will now be recognised that the court will operate as a court should. There is a great deal of feeling that there is a danger of the courts being treated as rubber stamps. In Committee we heard some suggestions that the courts ought to be left out altogether, and that one should be able to do these things by some administrative process.
It is therefore important that the provisions of the Bill should be in such a form as will normally be administered by the courts. We are grateful for the form of the Clause, for the intention behind it, and for much of its content, but I seriously suggest that the defects which I have tried to indicate ought to be remedied in the way that I propose.

Mr. Bruce Campbell: I, too, should like to express my appreciation to the sponsors for putting forward this new Clause. As the hon. Member for Rhondda, West (Mr. Alec Jones) said, this is the result of my interventions in Committee when I said that the Bill did not make it plain that it was open to a respondent to defend a petition purely on the ground that to grant a decree would result in financial or other hardship. I am, however, disappointed that we still have this expression
grave financial or other hardship",
because in every case this will leave the courts in the position of deciding what is grave financial hardship. How grave has grave financial or other hardship to be?
The hon. Member for Rhondda, West referred to the possibility of the loss of a widow's pension. This is something which every respondent wife will risk. That being so, is the risk to be classified? Is the risk of losing a widow's pension to be regarded as a grave financial hardship? If it does not come within the category of "grave", if it is just ordinary hardship, then the Clause will not meet the difficulties of most respondent wives. I should like some

guidance—and I am sure that the courts would welcome some—on what the expression is intended to mean.
When I raised this matter in Committee the hon. Member for Rhondda, West answered the debate. He said:
Hence it is the intention in Clause 4 that the court's discretion should not operate unless the hardship is disproportionate to that which would be caused to others by refusing to dissolve the marriage."—[OFFICIAL REPORT, Standing Committee B, 19th March, 1969; c. 398.]
I can understand that. If the position was that the judge looked at the parties before him; if on the one hand, he looked at the petitioner who was asking for a decree and considered all the facts which he has put forward—his desire to marry another woman, the wish of the other woman to be married, perhaps there are children to be legitimated—and on the other, he looked at the respondent wife who would run the risk for certain of losing her widow's pension—perhaps she could run other risks as well; the possibility of being evicted from her home if it belongs to her husband, and the fact that her children would suffer too—and he found that there would be greater hardship to the respondent by being divorced than there would be to the petitioner by making him stay married, and therefore refused to grant a decree—the sponsors of the Bill thereby adhering to what the hon. Member for Rhondda, West said in Committee—I would have little more to say. But, at a subsequent sitting, he resiled from what he had said. He stated that the judge would not be expected to look at the matter in that way at all and certainly not at the stage when he was considering whether there was grave financial or other hardship.
11.30 a.m.
We are thus back at the stage where, before the judge is to have any power to dismiss a petition, he has to be satisfied that to grant a decree would cause the respondent grave financial or other hardship. It is nonsense for the hon. Member to talk about the risk of losing a widow's pension unless he is saying that that is a grave financial hardship. If he is saying that, then he is talking about every respondent wife because, of course, if there is a divorce she will cease to be a wife and if she ceases to be a wife then she will never be a widow


Therefore, every respondent wife and every petitioner for that matter runs the risk on divorce of losing the widow's pension—and even if it is only £4 10s. a week, as at present, that is still £200 a year, which is a serious matter for the majority of those with whom we are concerned. Is that to be regarded as grave financial hardship? If so, it means that every respondent wife who raises such a defence will be entitled to have the petition dismissed.
If the hon. Member does not mean that, if he means that he considers the loss of a widow's pension as ordinary and not grave hardship, what does it mean? What sort of hardship has a respondent wife to prove to the court before she can succeed in preventing her marriage from being dissolved? I should like the hon. Gentleman to revert to what he said in Committee in the first place. I hope that I am not being presumptuous but I think that, when he made that statement, he was reading from a prepared document and that this was the idea which the sponsors of the Bill had in their minds when they introduced it.
I hope they will adhere to the principle that, when the judge has been asked to decide whether there has been grave financial or other hardship, he must apply the test of comparative hardship. This would mean that he would have to look at the petitioner and at the respondent. Obviously, the facts of each case will be different but if, in any case, he comes to the conclusion that it would be a greater hardship to the respondent to be divorced than it would be to the petitioner and others—the woman he wants to marry, the children, if any—to stay married, his duty is to dismiss the petition. New Clause 6 provides:
In determining whether, under section 4 hereof, the dissolution of a marriage would result in grave financial or other hardship to the respondent, the Court shall have regard to the question whether such hardship would be disproportionate to that likely to be suffered by others in the event of a decree being refused.
If new Clause 6 were coupled with new Clause 1, I would have little more to say, but unless it is it seems to me that new Clause 1 achieves precious little. It will merely leave respondent wives in the position of having to prove some awful hardship—which is the picture conjured up by the use of the phrase,

.. grave financial or other hardship …
and this surely cannot benefit many litigants. However, it would make sense if new Clause 6 were brought in as well.
We would then be in the position where the courts were able to do justice and to look at all the facts—the conduct of the parties, the interest of the children and other people who might wish to marry one or other of the spouses. The court could look at everything and then ask, "Where does the greater hardship lie?" If we are to have this Bill on the Statute Book at all, then there must at least be this amount of protection for completely innocent people—and that is where the consideration of the conduct of the parties becomes important.

Mr. John Lee: As a newcomer to the discussion, I support entirely the arguments of the hon. and learned Member for Oldham, West (Mr. Bruce Campbell). It is most important that the courts should be given not merely the widest possible discretion in evaluating the merits, interests and welfare of the parties but to take account of their conduct. It is clear over the last few years that in many respects the discretion of the court to take cognisance of the bad conduct of petitioners—

Mr. Speaker: Order. In this debate there is nothing about conduct. We are discussing hardship.

Mr. Lee: Surely it is relevant to observe that the courts seem to have taken less and less regard of the conduct of petitioners. If I understood the hon. and learned Gentleman correctly, he was in some measure seeking to put that back into the law. But the important point here is that new Clause 6 would place upon the court a duty to refuse a decree if these provisions were not satisfied. I understand that and accept the good faith of the sponsors of the Bill in regard to new Clause 1. Obviously they have been sensitive to criticism expressed in Committee.
Not long ago, we suffered from imprecision in legal matters in the sorry tale of the Parliament (No. 2) Bill. I would not like to feel that we were going to repeat here the sort of mistakes which became evident on close examination of that Bill by leaving the situation as vague as new Clause 1 would. For that reason I hope that my hon. Friends will give the


hon. and learned Member for Oldham, West the encouragement he deserves.

Mr. Charles Doughty: I approach this matter with an open mind because I was not on the Committee. I wonder whether the new Clause is workable in practice. Although I am sure that its sponsors have the best intentions, it will be very difficult to make it work.
I start from the assumption that about 99 per cent. of those concerned in divorces cannot afford the financial burden of running two homes, although some rich people might be able to divide their income or capital to that end. So the courts will be in a very difficult position. I have not the figures of the number of people who are on social security because they have been the subject of divorce proceedings, but it is enormous and I think will be found in the Payne Report on the Enforcement of Judgment Debts. Therefore, where the respondent opposes the grant of a decree nisi, when it could be granted under the Bill, because he or she would be left in grave financial or other hardship, the judge will have to inquire into the whole conduct of the marriage and of course about the children.
So in any undefended petition in which the respondent pleads financial hardship the marriage and the financial situation will have to be examined. Apart from the question of widows' pensions, the husband might be earning only £16 a week and living with another woman, by whom he has one or two children, while his wife has three children by the marriage, and he could not be expected to keep five children on that money. That occurs in a large majority of cases throughout the country.
What is the unfortunate judge to do? If he refuses a decree because of the hardship to the woman, then if a woman had admitted adultery or cruelty for a long time but would be left virtually penniless and unable to earn any worth-while sum, the judge would not grant a decree under this Bill, although he might have done so under the old law.
Another practical reason is that the vast majority of divorce petitions are undefended and the respondent sometimes appears to discuss costs, although not very often. When the women are respondents,

there will undoubtedly be a large number of answers, not upon the merits or demerits of the petition, but upon this Clause.
Already, the courts are so swamped with divorce petitions that they have had to be sent to the county courts. I have the greatest respect for county court judges, but they now have to know the common law, which is hard enough, with the various Landlord and Tenant Acts and laws of negligence, they now have to try criminal cases, which is quite a different branch of the law, and then they have to study the complicated divorce law. With the greatest respect, they have neither the training nor the time in their busy courts to deal with such complicated matters, so the new Clause, whatever Members of the Committee may have said, will be impractical. Although it realises the hardships, it does not provide—indeed, I do not think that anyone could provide—a way to solve them.

Mr. Speaker: With reference to my earlier Ruling, I was wrong in calling the hon. Member for Reading (Mr. John Lee) to order. The question of conduct is in the new Clause; I had misread it.

11.45 a.m.

Dame Irene Ward: I want to thank the sponsors for having introduced the new Clause and allowing the House to range more widely over the problems. It is extremely difficult for a layman like myself—I have only only limited experience as a magistrate—to enter into the legal discussion, but what I have heard has confirmed me in my early decision, when the Bill was presented and went to the Standing Committee, on which I sat, to oppose it—not in every detail but in the main sense. Having heard the distinguished legal Members this morning, I realise how many aspects of this problem arise for the courts to decide if real justice is to be done.
I cannot enter into the legal points but I should like to mention how much I regret the fact that a Bill of this kind has been brought forward as a Private Member's Bill—

Mr. Speaker: Order. With respect, we are not on the Third Reading or the Second Reading of the Bill.

Dame Irene Ward: It is very difficult for me to make my case, Mr. Speaker. I suppose that I can talk in general terms about the new Clause, which is not receiving overwhelming support from those of my hon. and learned Friends whose opinion I would follow, and which I shall continue to follow. It is essential that, if the Bill is to reach the Statute Book at all—I would prefer that it did not in its present form—it should be one of which the House and the country can be proud. I am satisfied that the new Clause does not bring us within reach of a satisfactory solution. It is tremendously important, in the interests of justice, for the protection of both women and men, that we should not go forward with a Bill—

Mr. Speaker: Order. The question at the moment is whether we go forward with this new Clause.

Dame Irene Ward: It is apparent from what has been said by my colleagues that the new Clause will not completely meet the situation. I am not in a position to discuss its legal implications, and therefore I shall not attempt to do so. However, having served on the Committee and having endeavoured to add what knowledge I had to the discussions on the Bill, and because this is probably the last occasion on which we shall deal with this matter, I thought it necessary to assert, as I tried to assert throughout the Committee proceedings, that it would be regrettable if we went forward with the Bill without providing a basis for fair decision and ensuring that sufficient guidance is given to the judges who will have a very difficult role to play in connection with the Bill.
Therefore, I am not prepared to do other than follow the guidance given to the House, the country and the sponsors of the Bill by my right hon. and hon. Friends.

Sir Hugh Lucas-Tooth: My right hon. and learned Friend the Member for Chertsey (Sir L. Heald) put his finger on the difficulty which arises on the new Clause. He pointed out that the burden on the respondent of satisfying the court that the dissolution of the marriage will result in grave financial or other hardship will be difficult to discharge. I am not sure, however, that his view of the wording is correct. The new Clause states:

For the purposes of this section hardship shall include the loss of the chance of acquiring any thing which the respondent might acquire if the marriage were not dissolved.
That conflicts with earlier words which imply that it will be necessary positively to establish that there will be some loss. The words which I have just quoted refer merely to the loss of a chance. I am not sure that there is not a discrepancy.

Mr. Abse: It is precisely because we wish to make it abundantly clear that even the loss of a chance must be included within the term "hardship" that it has been specified in that way. There is no conflict. It is made clear that
For the purposes of this section
this type of hardship shall be included.

Sir H. Lucas-Tooth: I am grateful to the hon. Gentleman. May I put the argument the other way round, which it is fair to do? If this chance is to be included, there is the implication that other chances may not be included. The implication is that this is the only case in which an expectation is to be included and that in other cases certainty must be established. This point should be considered.
How will the new Clause marry up with subsection (2) of Clause 6? Subsection (2) provides that the court shall not make the decree absolute unless it is satisfied
that the financial provision made by the petitioner for the respondent is reasonable and fair or the best that can be made in the circumstances.
I imagine that the new Clause would be imported if the respondent could establish that the provision to be made for her was not reasonable and fair. But then comes the alternative—
or the best that can be made in the circumstances.
That implies that the courts can make an order when something less than reasonable and fair is suggested. This is in direct conflict with the new Clause. If the respondent can establish that there is reason to suppose that something less than reasonable and fair is to be provided for her, that amounts to financial hardship. It may be said that it is merely a question of degree. If so, we are very much at sea.
I am in favour of the Bill. It is my intention to vote for it on Third Reading, but I should not be willing to do that unless I am satisfied that it does not leave women, against their will, with something which is less than reasonable and fair. I am not satisfied about the Bill as drafted, and I am not sure how far the new Clause helps. We should have a better explanation before we pass it.

Dr. Hugh Gray: I oppose the inclusion of the new Clause in the Bill. It is in direct contradiction to the basic principle on which the Bill rests, namely, that
the sole ground on which a petition for divorce may be presented to the court by either party to a marriage shall be that the marriage has broken down irretrievably".
If a marriage has "broken down irretrievably", it has broken down irretrievably. A decree must be granted and the courts must make whatever arrangements they can in the circumstances.
The new Clause seeks to qualify the basic principle on which the Bill rests by introducing "grave financial … hardship"—in other words, one law for the rich and another for the poor. The rich man gets his decree and the poor man does not. Then it ambiguously introduces the concept of other hardships which are not defined.
The new Clause also contradicts the basic principle of equality before the law. I hope that, as with the Parliament (No. 2) Bill, the Clause will be thrown out as a result of collaboration between Right and Left.

Mr. W. A. Wilkins: Those of us who sat through the Committee stage of the Bill would have been more than surprised if my hon. Friend the Member for Yarmouth (Dr. Gray) had not made the speech which he has just made. We have heard it three or four times before, on almost every occasion that he has had an opportunity to make it. Some of us find it extremely difficult to follow his reasoning. In fact, it does not seem to be reasons; it seems to be unreason.
I support both Amendments proposed by the right hon. and learned Member for Chertsey (Sir L. Heald), although I

am more concerned about the Amendment in line 3, which requests that the words "or any child" should be inserted after "to him". It is a remarkable co-incidence that the one thing which is absent from the Bill is any reference to the welfare of the children of the first marriage what I call "the forgotten factor." It is outstanding and one cannot miss it. Although we are now trying to persuade the sponsor—

Mr. Alec Jones: Mr. Alec Jones rose—

12 noon.

Mr. Wilkins: Just a moment. Although we are trying to persuade the sponsor to include these three words in the new Clause, so far no indication has been made by him that he recognises the necessity for the words to be included.

Mr. Alec Jones: Has my hon. Friend not noticed that the new Clause specifically mentions the word "children"? We are asking the court to weigh all the circumstances including the circumstances of the children. The words in the new Clause are:
and of any children or other persons concerned.

Mr. Wilkins: That is why I was surprised that, although those words were inserted in line 6, they did not appear in the first three lines. I could not understand it. If those words appear in line 6, what objection is there to their being included in the third line after the words "to him"?
My hon. Friend the Member for Rhondda, West (Mr. Alec Jones) must understand the reason for our anxiety. One of the supporters of the Bill, the hon. Member for Yarmouth, has given the House cause for great anxiety. He said during the proceedings in Committee:
It says that a decree shall be pronounced only if '… it is clearly in the child's or children's interests to do so …' Against this, I maintain that the children's interests must come second."—[OFFICIAL REPORT, Standing Committee B, 5th March, 1969; c. 251.]
This is doctrine to which some of us could not possibly subscribe, especially when the victims are the children of the first marriage and not of the subsequent marriage which may take place as a result of the divorce.
We as members of the Committee requested the Solicitor-General to give the Committee the benefit of the Government's advice on this matter and he was good enough to do so. He is a great personal friend of mine, and I hope that he will favour us with his advice again this morning and will put the matter on record so that there should be no doubt.
The advice given to the Committee by the learned Solicitor-General was:
In the view of the Government"—

The Solicitor-General (Sir Arthur Irvine): From which column is my hon. Friend reading?

Mr. Wilkins: I am reading from what the learned Solicitor-General said at the sixth Sitting of Standing Committee B, on 5th March, in column 234. He said:
In the view of the Government it is, of course, of the greatest possible importance"—
those are strong words; I have never used words like those, though I did speak strongly in the Committee—
that full and proper regard should be had for the position of the children of broken marriages. Both the hon. Member for Chelsea (Mr. Worsley) and the hon. and learned Member for Southport (Mr. Percival) appeared to feel some anxiety"—[OFFICIAL REPORT, Standing Committee B, 5th March; c. 234.]
about the language of the subsection. He concluded that what Section 33 of the 1965 Act does is to require that before a court shall make absolute a decree, it must be satisfied with the arrangements for the care and upbringing of the children under the age of 16. One cannot have anything clearer than that. Why on earth will not the sponsors include those words in the third line?
They must forgive us if we are a little suspicious of their motives when they do not agree to accept what almost everybody present today feels is a reasonable request by the right hon. and learned Member for Chertsey for whose help on the Bill we must all pay tribute, as well as for the help of the hon. and learned Member for Oldham, West (Mr. Bruce Campbell).
This has been a painful business for some of us who have not liked the sittings on this Bill. Let us be frank about it, we think that it is a shocking Bill.

Mr. Speaker: Order. We are not on either Second or Third Reading. Will

the hon. Gentleman come to the Amendment?

Mr. Wilkins: I thought, Mr. Speaker, that I should be in trouble before very long. I defer to your Ruling. I think that I have made the point that I wanted to make. I am surprised at the actions of my hon. Friend the Member for Rhondda, West. He is a Welshman and the Welsh are a warm-hearted people, a great family nation. Yet the benches behind him are almost denuded of any support from his own colleagues. I find it difficult to understand, except to say that the Bill cannot comment itself—

Mr. Speaker: Order. The hon. Gentleman has said that he defers to my Ruling. He must come to order.

Mr. Wilkins: I suppose at this point I have offended my hon. Friend the Member for Rhondda, West. I apologise to him if I have offended him. I hope that he will forgive me, but I was feeling that way. Perhaps he will now see some sense and stand up and say "Yes, I accept this Amendment."

Mr. Ian Percival: It would be ungracious not to recognise that, in one respect, this new Clause is an improvement on the Clause which it replaces and that it meets a point which was raised in Committee. The point related to the effect of the Clause, whether it would provide a defence to proceedings, and, if not, how it was to work. That is clarified in the opening sentence of the new Clause. To that extent the new Clause is an improvement on the Clause, and I hope that it may take its place.
It would be optimistic of the House to suppose that in the formula which is now before us the wording is devoid of all doubt and provides a nice, clear wording which raises no legal complications or difficulties, which is the distinction I draw as to its working.
As the right hon. and learned Gentleman the Member for Epsom (Sir P. Rawlinson) said in Committee yesterday, it is the optimism of this House which provides the lawyers with a living. Nevertheless, we still go on, at the expense of our own livings, trying to ensure that the wording with which this House parts is wording which we can understand when we come to it professionally


as colleagues, and which possibly on occasion our lay clients might even be able to understand—although perhaps that is asking rather a lot.
It is fatuous if we in this House turn out legislation which is further material for litigation. In this respect I hope that the sponsors will have another look at the new Clause in order to see whether they can improve it in the later stages of the Bill.
In the interests of brevity, I will give an indication of the two broad lines on which I respectfully ask them to look at the matter again. My hon. Friend the Member for Hendon, South (Sir H. Lucas-Tooth) has raised a point of interpretation and I understand that there may well be something in it on the lines put forward in an intervention by the hon. Member for Pontypool (Mr. Abse).
We want to avoid argument. If the words "grave financial … hardship "are meant to cover any possibility of future loss, why not for "will" substitute the word "may"?

Mr. Speaker: Order. We cannot in this debate propose Amendments other than those which we are discussing.

Mr. Percival: With great respect, Mr. Speaker, I am not putting forward any Amendment, but trying, as briefly as possible, to illustrate the point. I think that, if you will bear with me, that will prove to be shorter than trying to put it in another way.
My objection to the Clause is that it has two possible meanings. If the intended meaning is that put forward by the hon. Member for Rhondda West (Mr. Alec Jones) in his intervention, and by his hon. Friend the Member for Pontypool, would it not be advisable for them at a later stage to substitute "may" for "will"? I submit that, otherwise there may be an argument that, prima facie, it is only where positive financial hardship is established that this comes into operation and that the last three lines merely bring in a particular proviso. It would be optimism on the part of the sponsors or the House to suppose that we now have wording that is free from doubt. That is what we all want to have, so I hope that the promoter and his friends will give further consideration to the wording.
The hon. Member for Rhondda, West took exception to the complaint made by the hon. Member for Bristol, South (Mr. Wilkins) about the paucity of references to children, if I may put it neutrally, and pointed out that the Clause refers to children and their interests. I take it from that remark that it is the hon. Gentleman's intention here to give the court jurisdiction to say that if it thinks that in all the circumstances, and having regard to the interests of the children, it would be wrong to grant a decree, it may dismiss the petition.
If that is the intention, I submit that the wording now chosen will not lead to that result. It is still a condition precedent to the exercise of this jurisdiction by the court that the respondent must establish that the granting of the decree
… will result in grave financial or other hardship to him …
The effect would be that if a respondent filed an answer setting out the Clause, the court would then have to inquire into the conduct of the party, their interests, the interests of any children or the interests of any other person concerned.
If the court came to the conclusion that having regard to the conduct of the party or to the interest of the children or other parties concerned there ought not to be a decree, it still could not exercise its jurisdiction under the Clause unless it also came to the conclusion that to do so would cause grave financial or other hardship to the respondent—not to the children or to the other interested parties.
The Clause would therefore still preserve as a sine qua non that the respondent must prove grave financial or other hardship. Unless he did that, it would not matter what conclusion the court came to in relation to the interests of the parties or of the children. Unless the respondent established that sine qua non, the court, whatever conclusion it might come to on the other considerations, could not exercise jurisdiction under this Clause.
I do not believe that to be the intention of the promoter. It is a result wholly inconsistent with his last intervention when he said that under the Clause the court must have regard to the interests of the children. If that is what is intended, some alteration must at a later stage be made to the wording.


Otherwise, those responsible for the Bill will be introducing something which on the face of it, appears to give the court jurisdiction to have regard to the circumstances, including the interests of the children, and then puts on the court this very severe limitation that it cannot exercise this jurisdiction unless there is proved to be grave or other financial hardship to the respondent.
Therefore, while I welcome part of this new Clause, as it is an improvement in that respect, I hope that the promoters will reconsider the wording still further, so that we shall not have yet another instance of legislation leading simply to a lot of litigation and producing a result not intended by them.

Mr. Simon Mahon: My views on the Clause and the Bill are well known. My hon. Friend the Member for Rhondda, West (Mr. Alec Jones) says that in this Clause he has considered the main interests and welfare of all the children. In this respect, I agree quite categorically with what has been said by my hon. Friend the Member for Yarmouth (Dr. Gray) and by the hon. and learned Member for Surrey, East (Mr. Doughty). I go further, and say that if the nation considered the overall interests of the children before considering the interests of the parties concerned in the marriage, divorce would be a very rare occurrence because, primarily, it is the welfare of the children that marriage is all about.
It has been said that under this Clause 99 per cent. of people would not be able to afford a divorce. I do not know of one family in my constituency that could afford to keep two homes going. We on this side particularly know that it takes a father and mother all their time, all their interest and all their money, morning noon and night, to maintain the interests of their family, to do the right thing and to keep that family together. That is the purpose of marriage. Therefore, if we pursue the lines on which the sponsors of the Bill are bent—and it is quite out of character—we shall be speaking for the rich, and for the very rich. They would examine only the conditions of the poor and not the turmoil of the rich family. If one cannot succeed on a financial basis in satisfying those examining one's case, the financial needs and all the other sordid aspects will have

to be considered. Do hon. Members think this is a right thing to do?
I do not think the Clause is workable. It is discriminatory between the rich and the poor. The hon. and learned Member for Southport (Mr. Percival) said that it is the optimism of this House that provides lawyers with a living. About another lawyer it was once said:
For your legal cause or civil
You fight well and get your fee,
For your dream of God or Devil
You will answer not to me".
I hope that the two hon. and learned Members will not be answerable to me in this case because I have enough to answer for myself.

Mr. Speaker: Order. This debate is fairly wide, but we are not in it discussing the legal profession.

Mr. Mahon: I was giving my right hon. and learned Friend the Solicitor-General a chance to come back to the Front Bench. He seems to have disappeared.
The Government have an obligation here and they have indicated their obligation towards the Clause. As my hon. Friend the Member for Bristol, South (Mr. Wilkins) said, they were to make a very important statement from the point of view of social security as to what would happen to the children of a broken marriage. The Clause deals precisely with that subject. I am rather surprised that up to now the Government have not declared their intention. It would be extremely helpful to us in making an adjudication if we knew whether they give tacit support to the Clause and if the Government would declare where they stand.

Mr. Peter Mahon: My hon. Friend the Member for Bristol, South (Mr. Wilkins) said that many of us have great fears about this Bill, and particularly this Clause. In my view that is putting the position very mildly. I have had many letters in recent days and months, in fact for a year past, from members of women's organisations. I share their perturbation and great fear as to what might be the outcome of some of the rather devastating Clauses in the Bill.

Mr. Speaker: That is a comment which would be more appropriate to the Third


Reading. The hon. Member must come to the Clause.

Mr. Mahon: Yes I must come to the Clause and I am grateful for your guidance, Mr. Speaker.
The question of financial protection for a divorced spouse and the family is of such paramount important that it cannot be regarded in any cavalier manner. I am glad that you have ruled that conduct can be referred to, Mr. Speaker, particularly as those of us who have had magisterial experience over many years know that petitioners endeavour to achieve their desire to be divorced or separated without any realistic sense of responsibility even towards their own family who invariably are the sufferers in a divorce.
When people seek divorce they can be very ruthless, callous and unkind to the dear people with whom they have lived for many years and who have served them well during marriage and togetherness. The possibility of grave financial hardship being the lot of those who have served one partner or the other in marriage seems at the crucial time when divorce is being sought to be the least of their considerations. In their estimation at this time these considerations are more or less unimportant. In their view the end—divorce—justifies the means.
If the people concerned are not particularly bothered about the financial arrangements, Parliament, and eventually the community, must fill the gap, and an unbridgeable gap it could prove to be. This is occupying the attention of my hon. Friends at the Treasury who want to know just how far they can go in endeavouring to bridge this unbridgeable gap, which more often than not is beyond the competence of those engaged in divorce to handle. This causes me the greatest possible concern, as I believe eventually it will cause great concern to the people of this country.
I have never been afraid to confess that I take pride in the fact that I possess a religious faith. By the same token I have always wanted to pay my just dues, but I do not want to make any contribution in this regard. I think that I ought to be able to say that from a financial point of view I and people who think like me should be allowed to say

that we shall not concur in the building-up of another Casanova's Charter.

Mr. Speaker: Order. That part of the hon. Member's speech would be in order when we discuss the social security measures which Her Majesty's Government propose to bring before the House, but now we are discussing a Clause which empowers the court to take certain circumstances into consideration as a means of refusing a divorce. The hon. Member must come to the Clause.

Mr. Mahon: I resent the discriminatory nature of the whole of these procedures whereby certain people can take advantage of whatever arrangements we make while others according to the Clause will be at a loss. Things happen quickly in marriage. They say that marriages are made in Heaven but invariably they end somewhere else. The other day I heard of a lady who said, "Come quickly, Bill. My kids and your kids are knocking hell out of our kids". I hope we never reach that position.

Mr. Speaker: Order. Even stories that are funny can be sometimes be out of order. The hon. Gentleman must not discuss the Bill. He is tempting himself to discuss the Bill, which I gather he is not very keen about. We are, however, debating the question whether new Clause 1 should be added to the Bill in place of a Clause which would then be taken out later. The hon. Gentleman must come to that proposition.

Mr. Mahon: Your kindness to me, Sir, has been exemplary. In token of my sincere gratitude, I shall say no more.

12.30 p.m.

Mr. Tim Fortescue: Like my hon. and learned Friend the Member for Surrey, East (Mr. Doughty), I was not a member of the Standing Committee. I am therefore a stranger to anything that happened in Committee. I wish to raise the question of the social security relationship to this Clause and to new Clause 6.
As my hon. and learned Friend said, the judge in any case in which the new Clause were invoked would be put into an impossible position in trying to interpret the question of grave financial hardship. Over many years since the war Parliament has attempted to legislate so


that nobody is in grave financial hardship. Through an elaborate series of social security provisions, which are becoming more complicated and more generous every day—I am not criticising—we endeavour to ensure that a man or woman, with or without children, is in all circumstances protected.

Mr. Speaker: Order. I know the hon. Gentleman's keen interest in all questions of social security, but on this Clause we cannot debate the social security provisions that at present obtain or which are likely to obtain in the future.

Mr. Wilkins: On a point of order. In the case of a divorce where the respondent has not sufficient money to maintain two homes, will not the family of one party or the other, or perhaps both parties, become a charge on social security?

Mr. Speaker: Order. This is the merits or demerits of the whole Bill. The Clause which we are discussing would enjoin the judge to take into account, among other things, financial hardship.

Mr. Fortescue: I do not seek to debate the social security measures. I was calling the attention of the House to them so as to support the point which I am about to make. In talking of grave financial hardship, there must be some semblance of a criterion. Parliament has legislated so that in theory nobody is in grave financial hardship. Therefore, when the judge is considering the question of grave financial hardship he must be able to compare the condition of the respondent, if the divorce goes through, with something. As I understand it, to that end my hon. and learned Friend the Member for Oldham, West (Mr. Bruce Campbell) has tabled new Clause 6, which would force the judge to consider the respondent's financial position, if the divorce were to go through, with the financial position of any other parties concerned. There at once the judge would have something on which to rely. He could balance one side against the other.
I therefore ask you, Mr. Speaker, whether at the end of this debate it would be possible for the House to consider first new Clause 6, and to divide upon that, if that is the wish of the House,

because on the result of the debate and, possibly, Division on that new Clause will depend for many of us our attitude towards new Clause 1.

Mr. Edwin Brooks: The argument which has been advanced by the hon. Member for Liverpool, Garston (Mr. Fortescue) is persuasive. It is important for the House to satisfy itself about the criteria on which hardship is to be defined before it reaches any considered decision on the issues raised by New Clause 1.
I intervene to raise two points. The first arises from the contribution, which I gather was in character with his Committee interventions, made by my hon. Friend the Member for Yarmouth (Dr. Gray). He argued—there was an enormously simple logic behind the proposition—that if a marriage has broken down irretrievably, it has broken down irretrievably. On that basis I suppose we could all go home.
However, I think that that is rather over-simplifying the issue. Although it may be true that when a marriage has broken down irretrievably it has broken down irretrievably, not all marriages have broken down irretrievably and it is important to devise a social system—a legislative framework—which will discourage marriages from breaking down irretrievably. However valuable the deterrent implied in new Clause 1 and in the general range of Amendments we are discussing might prove to be in the event, it is better to have at least some deterrent against behaviour which is selfish, and even cruel, than to have no such deterrent.
My second point is perhaps rather more material. I must be one of the few Members, no doubt because I did not have the benefit of serving on the Standing Committee, who in general is rather more inclined to favour the original Clause 4 than new Clause 1. Furthermore, I suspect that were Clause 4 to be amended in the way which was suggested by the hon. and learned Member for Oldham, West (Mr. Bruce Campbell), it would be considerably improved.
My main reservations about new Clause 1 lie in the final three lines, although I have certain other reservations which were referred to by the hon. and learned Member for Southport (Mr. Percival). The Clause would require the


courts to read the tea-leaves with a vengeance, in interpreting the words—
hardship shall include the loss of the chance of acquiring any thing …".
There are gamblers and gamblers. I understand that some are happy to invest at odds of 1,000 to 1 against. I suppose it is defying the law of chance. If the Bill does not spell out in some way the degree of chance which might be involved, we might well inadvertently be introducing a criterion which would make it much more difficult in the future to obtain divorce when marriage has irretrievably broken down than is the case at present.
After all, all of us have our chances. Some of us have more chances than others. If all of us were to speculate about our future, particularly at this moment, we might not regard our chances as being very high. If we were to take a more sanguine and long-distance view, we might well believe that in the fullness of time, we, too, shall come into our inheritance.

Mr. Speaker: Order. The hon. Gentleman must find some other chance of debating that problem.

Mr. Brooks: Mr. Speaker, you have anticipated my intention of going on immediately to the second part of the ultimate sentence in the new Clause—
which the respondent might acquire if the marriage were not dissolved.
We are here in a very cloudy, hypothetical, speculative world. I have already referred at length to "the chance". We now have another form of words which will make it inevitably very difficult for the courts to apply any sort of consistent policy. It is impossible to foresee the future.
I appreciate the intentions of the sponsors of the Bill in trying to introduce this proposal; I fully understand this; and, indeed, I am in sympathy not only with their intentions in this respect but with the Bill as a whole, but I do feel that perhaps the original Clause 4 would, on the whole, have been perfectly competent to deal with this sort of problem. That Clause already gives protection if the respondent can foresee that the dissolution of the marriage would result in
grave financial or other hardship to him.

It seems to me, therefore, to follow that if the respondent can indicate that on a balance of probability about his or her future prospects there is going to be hardship entailed in the future the court has already discretion to act, and not, as seems to me to be implied, only were these three lines in new Clause 1 are to be added.
Therefore, I do wonder in all seriousness whether by elaborating, in effect, this Clause, by bringing in a lot more verbiage, which is bound to involve subjective judgments, we shall make it extremely difficult for the courts to have a consistent policy. We shall find that judgments in some cases are completely contradicted by those in others. I am in favour, in general, of the shortest wording possible consistent with the complexity of what is a difficult issue.
I would refer, if I may, without straying outside the rules of order, to a point which the hon. Member for Garston mentioned a short time ago, that inevitably there will be great ambiguity about the future provisions for financial assistance for those who may fall within the ambit of this Bill. We have already had clearly indicated to us that the future provision of social benefits is at present ambiguous. If that is ambiguous, nearly everything else about a respondents' future financial situation is equally ambiguous, and this can create a degree of difficulty in defining in some sort of quantitative way the degree of ambiguity which is probable. I suggest that this may well in practice mean that as time goes on the hands of the courts will be tied by precedents, which will make it more difficult to grant a divorce where a marriage has irretrievably and obviously broken down. This will run counter to the intentions of the sponsors of the Bill.

Mr. A. P. Costain: I was not a member of the Committee on the Bill, and I do not pretend for a moment to be an expert on divorce. I have, however, because of the interests of my constituents, endeavoured to follow the proceedings of the Committee. My own experience of the law is limited purely to building contracts, where we always take the view that the shorter the clause the easier it is to understand. I have listened, in consequence, with much interest to what


my hon. and learned Friends have had to say; they seem not to have declared an interest but they do seem to know an awful lot about it.
I am persuaded that an effective decision for a decree of divorce must depend upon the ability of the injured parties to have their interests sufficiently looked after. I take the point which my hon. Friend the Member for Liverpool, Garston (Mr. Fortescue) has made. In spite of what was said about the length of the Clause, what concerns me is that this Clause would be more appealing to me were it possible for new Clause 6 to be voted on before this new Clause 1. I wonder if it would be possible, within the rules of order, for that to be done.

Mr. Speaker: That is not possible.

12.45 p.m.

Mr. Costain: I thank you for that Ruling, Mr. Speaker, although it makes my position much more difficult. If it is not possible to decide on new Clause 6 first, I wonder whether, within the rules of order, the sponsors of the Bill would care to give the House some indication of what is their attitude to new Clause 6.

Mr. Speaker: It is in order for the sponsors of the Bill to give any undertaking they wish to.

Mr. Costain: I would, then, ask them immediately, will they give the House an assurance that they will support new Clause 6? That would affect the way I would vote on new Clause 1.

Mr. Abse: I am sure that the hon. and learned Member for Southport (Mr. Percival) is right to remind us that we are discussing these Amendments with the pessimism of lawyers. Indeed, it is this pessimism which we have to overcome. That does not mean that the difficulties of interpretation, or the assurances which have been mentioned, too, by the hon. Member for Hendon, South (Sir H. Lucas-Tooth), are the sort of difficulties to which the sponsors of the Bill will not continue, in the way they have, and in the way they have brought forward this new Clause, to give careful consideration. The intervention I made in an endeavour to assist the very cogent point being made by the hon. Member for Hendon, North is, I think, the prevailing attitude as at present among the sponsors. We are grateful to the hon.

and learned Member for Oldham, West (Mr. Bruce Campbell) for having brought forward his new Clause as a result of his persistence, with the encouragement and help of his right hon. and learned Friend.

12.45 p.m.

Sir H. Lucas-Tooth: Could we get this quite certain? Is the hon. Gentleman saying that as far as the sponsors are concerned they do wish that the word "will" shall be interpreted, roughly speaking, as if it were "may"? Is that their intention?

Mr. Abse: The only issue to which I was referring was the fact that the hon. Member was suggesting that there could be conflict with the subsequent Clause. I think he has not sufficiently appreciated that it will be possible under the subsequent Clause to have definition in so far as in one case the respondent will be filing a defence, and in the other case he will not. Therefore I suggest that he may find, and we may find, when we examine the point he has made, and to which he was drawing attention, that it is largely illusory. Certainly I will tell him that we will examine the point he has made.
I think that the hon. and learned Member for Surrey, East (Mr. Doughty) and the hon. Member for Yarmouth (Dr. Gray) have between them drawn attention to what to some extent is the crux of the matter. The hon. and learned Member for Surrey, East is quite right to point out that, half of the Clause being very permissive, it is in no way extending the rights of divorce, that in many senses, as he well implied, it is a more restrictive Clause. I am not surprised, therefore, that my hon. Friend the Member for Yarmouth, very vigorously, as is his wont, objected, because the fact is that this Clause will mean that in every case, as the hon. and learned Member for Surrey, East pointed out, it will be open to advisers of someone on whom a divorce petition has been served to examine whether there is grave financial or other hardship, and it will in theory be possible for them to contemplate the possibility of filing a defence. I do not, however, take as pessimistic a view as the hon. and learned Member. This will mean that advisers, looking at the facts, and knowing it will not only be grave or other financial hardship to be considered, will be looking in great detail


at all the circumstances of the case, as delineated in the new Clause. I do not think it will have the result he fears, but I am grateful to him for drawing the attention of the House to this.
I hope it is understood by the hon. Member for Bristol, South (Mr. Wilkins) that this Clause, if he is really seeking to vote against it, is a Clause which is bound to cause unease, not only to the hon. Member for Yarmouth but many others who have been in touch with me. If we are to get a more rational divorce law on the Statute Book, we are conceding that, in certain aspects, we are making the present law more restrictive.

Mr. Simon Mahon: I am following my hon. Friend's argument with care. It would appear that his argument can stand up in the eyes and ears of intelligent men only if he has foreknowledge of what the Government are going to do about social security.

Mr. Abse: I do not think that the hon. and learned Member for Surrey, East, in spite of his experience on the Bench and as a practising lawyer, has fully grasped what we are talking about. It will be possible in every divorce case—in the adultery case, in the old cruelty case and as it is under the Bill—to file a defence in a way which hitherto has not been possible. It is right that he should indicate that there could be administrative difficulties, although I do not think that these are likely to arise in the manner in which he, in a somewhat Cassandra fashion, has pointed out.

Mr. Doughty: Where a respondent has committed adultery a couple of times, and the petitioner is a rich person, the respondent will be unsuccessful in opposing the divorce. The same position arises with a poor petitioner; the respondent will then be successful in opposition. The question is how many £s a week will compound for a couple of acts of adultery?

Mr. Abse: However ingenious we may seek to be, advantages will always remain in the hands of the rich as against the poor. Although that is bound to happen with any legislation, as matters unfold, it will be seen that we have done all that we can to give equality to poorer people.
The right hon. and learned Member for Chertsey (Sir L. Heald), who has made such an important contribution throughout the proceedings and can, with the hon. and learned Member for Oldham, West take some responsibility for the new Clause, has now sought, with the best intentions and with a sense of compassion, to direct attention to the question of the child, or, as he has put it, any child. Since these proceedings have gone on for so long, no sponsor takes legalistic points on drafting, but there are difficulties in the manner in which the right hon. and learned Member has drafted the Amendment, since obviously it cannot be "any child", and I assume that he has in mind "any relevant child".
The crux of the matter here and the difference between us lies upon this. The sponsors of the Bill from the beginning have regarded it as quite inappropriate that the position of children should in itself be a ground for opposition to divorce. The interests of children must be considered and protected, and that protection is achieved to a large extent by Section 33 of the Matrimonial Causes Act. I and those who support the general principles of the Bill would regard it as quite wrong to make children the cause of their parents' failure to be relieved of the shackles of a dead marriage. That is why I would oppose the right hon. and learned Member's Amendment, well intentioned though it is. I do not believe that that is the best way to seek to protect children. We must all the time have in mind that what causes hardship to children is the breakdown of the marriage and the disruption of the home. But we are here dealing with a marriage which has been found to have irretrievably broken down—

Mr. Wilkins: I presume that the hon. Member for Pontypool (Mr. Abse) accepts that the doctrine that he is now expounding is in complete conflict with the opinion of the Government on this, according to what I earlier read to the House. The hon. Member is now asking hon. Members to accept his viewpoint against the advice of the Government, the Law Officers and everyone else.

Mr. Abse: The hon. Member has misinterpreted what the Solicitor-General has said. The Solicitor-General in the quotation to which my hon. Friend referred


was giving guidance on the protection which exists under Section 33 of the Matrimonial Causes Act, which requires the court to be satisfied before granting a decree as to the arrangements for the care and upbringing of the children. The hon. Member is making a mistake in suggesting that I am in any way in conflict with the view put forward by the Solicitor-General. On the contrary, I am seeking to point out that what we are not prepared to do is to take any action which causes the children to be used as a football between the parties in a way which would become possible if the children could be regarded as the cause of the parents' failure to be relieved of what one or both parents regard as the shackles of a dead marriage. For those reasons I cannot support the Amendment.
A totally different situation arises on new Clause 6 from that which may have arisen in Committee on what I would describe as the defective Clause 4 in which, in particular, the hon. and learned Member for Oldham, West illuminated serious defects. New Clause 6 would create a situation which could cause great difficulties. It must be obvious to every lawyer in the House that it would be singularly inappropriate that there should be a separate Clause dealing with this aspect of Clause 4. Any limitation should be part of the new Clause. Secondly, and this is the important point, it would be undesirable to limit the court's discretion and prevent it having regard to other aspects which may be relevant in particular cases.

Mr. Bruce Campbell: Does the new Clause limit the court's discretion in any way? It simply guides the court and does not limit its discretion.

Mr. Abse: That is not how I interpret it and, on the advice I have taken, that is not how it is to be interpreted. It is because of that, and because I am satisfied that the new Clause gives, as it should, proper discretion to the court to concern itself with all the circumstances of the case, that the sponsors of the Bill are not able to support it.
The hon. Member for Bebington (Mr. Brooks) drew attention to the last few lines of the proposed new Clause. He has been generous enough to say that he understands the intentions of the sponsors here. We are deeply concerned

that there should be no ambiguity, and that the possibility of the chance of a pension should be in no way ignored. Were those lines, which he queried with such wit, not inserted, it could be suggested that if the wife is pre-deceased by the husband no pension would fall to her, and we are anxious that that position should not arise, and that it should be a duty imposed on the court to take into consideration the question of the possibility of the chance. We are not being wildly speculative; we have sought to protect the woman in such proceedings who otherwise may be in serious difficulty.
1.0 p.m.
It is for all those reasons that I ask that new Clause No. 1 should be accepted and the Amendments rejected. I sincerely hope that the right hon. and learned Member for Chertsey, who has made such an important contribution in giving us new Clause No. 1, will not fall into the trap which has been offered to him by my hon. Friend the Member for Yarmouth (Dr. Gray) and that we can proceed immediately to deal with all the Amendments.

Mr. Wilkins: Can my hon. Friend confirm that Amendment No. 14 is a consequential Amendment to the new Clause?

Mr. Abse: Yes.

Mr. Peter M. Jackson: rose in his place and claimed to move, That the Question be now put; but Mr. DEPUTY SPEAKER withheld his consent and declined then to put that Question.

Dame Joan Vickers: I would like to find out a little more about the merits of the two new Clauses. This was the one point on which I had a difference with the sponsors of the Bill in Committee, and I voted against the original Amendments. As this is a very important matter, I wonder whether it would be possible for the Solicitor-General to give us the benefit of his advice, because every one of us must make up our minds on this point. I should be grateful for the Solicitor-General's help.

Sir Brandon Rhys Williams: Since we have had an


important speech in clarification of the intentions of the new Clause from the hon. Member for Pontypool (Mr. Abse), I hope that I may be permitted to make one or two brief observations. First, I wish to apologise that I was not able to be present from the beginning of the discussion on the Clause, but I trust that what I say will follow on from what the hon. Member has just said and will not be redundant or out of place.
The hon. Member for Pontypool said two things that, I thought, were striking and extremely damaging to the Bill. He said that the Clause would in effect be restrictive. He also said that there should be equity for poorer people, too. I know that throughout the discussion since the Bill was presented there has been among the public, and certainly among people in my constituency, a great deal of anxiety that it would result in financial hardship in certain circumstances.
I have not attempted to take part in the discussion of the Bill up till now because I have felt that it was good in principle. As I read through it again as it has been amended in Standing Committee, I still think that it contains many things which are valuable and right. In particular, I still welcome the contents of Clause 1, which is so plain and specific—that
a petition for divorce may be presented to the court by either party to a marriage.
on the sole ground
that the marriage has broken down irretrievably.
Immediately, however, exceptions are introduced.
Are we to deem that a marriage has not broken down irretrievably if the parties to it are not sufficiently well off to be able to accept the consequences of divorce? Obviously that is not its meaning, but by new Clause No. 1 that would be the effect. There would be certain instances in which a marriage had plainly broken down irretrievably, in which the circumstances were tragic or hilarious but, at any rate, conclusive, and yet in which the court had to deem that the marriage had not broken down irretrievably because of the hardship that would result.
Clause 4 was an attempt to deal with that situation. New Clause No. 1 is an

attempt to deal with it. It is objectionable to hon. Members on this side—and, I would have thought, certainly to hon. Members opposite—that there should be one law for the rich and another for the poor.
I therefore ask the sponsors of the Bill to consider this a little more carefully. Can they not hold on to what is good in the Bill and then find means of dealing with the questions of financial hardship and the need to protect the spouse or the children by other means, rather than reversing in their tracks and saying that they do not intend that the operation of Clause 1 shall apply throughout the whole range of possible circumstances that may come before the court?
I hope that my words will carry weight with the sponsors of the Bill, otherwise I feel that it will run into difficulties from the first and that if it comes into effect, we shall immediately find in the courts that considerations of financial matters will be paramount rather than the circumstances of the two unhappy people and their lives together.
My concept of marriage is that it is primarily a moral contract and not a financial one. If we are to contemplate the circumstances in which marriage comes to an end, we must contemplate them primarily in the light of moral considerations—the inter-relations of the parties and the nature of their characters, and not their financial environment.
I looked at the Bill as it came back from Standing Committee and I felt that it had not been improved, in the sense that throughout reference is made again and again to the financial circumstances of the parties. This reflects wrong thinking fundamentally on the nature of matrimony. It indicates the view that the contract is primarily financial and that the financial circumstances must be paramount in any considerations that the court may take into account as to the dissolution of the contract.
This is where I part company with the sponsors of the Bill. Although I recognise entirely the value of what they are trying to do in bringing order and light into the complex legal situation which has grown up round divorce—

Mr. Bruce Campbell: Does not my hon. Friend appreciate that a woman


who gives 20 years of her life to a man must at the end of that time, if then thrown aside, suffer severely financially and that the sponsors are quite right in putting financial protection at the forefront of their Bill?

Sir B. Rhys Williams: Of course I recognise that, but if we are to stand on the ground delineated so plainly by Clause 1—if the court has to ask whether the marriage has or has not broken down—let us be absolute about it. Let the court confine itself to those considerations and afterwards, if the Bill is to receive public approval, the sponsors must find ways of dealing with the question of financial hardship as a separate matter, as a consequential issue. They should not say that these problems of financial hardship are so grave that they must immediately back-track on their principles and virtually say that for the poor breakdown of marriage may not be considered by the court and that it is only for the very rich. This is deeply objectionable, and the sponsors of the Bill should think again about it.

The Solicitor-General: My task as I have understood it in the consideration of the Bill, both upstairs and now at this stage, has been to assist the Committee and the House as well as I can on questions of law arising and on questions of interpretation. That is how I see the task which I have to perform. The House will permit me to mention that I think it is only this view of my function that is consistent with the neutrality which is the attribute of the Government's position in this matter.
I mention in passing that I believe it to be of great importance in the House of Commons that it should be clearly recognised that to give time, and even, it may be, to give drafting facilities and facilities of that kind to a particular Measure which deals with problems of the very greatest social importance to the community as a whole, is entirely consistent with neutrality on the part of the Government.
The Government, in giving the facilities to which I have referred, are taking account of the importance of problems which everybody feels it is desirable to solve and to clear up in the national

interest. The Government desire Parliament to come to a conclusion upon these great matters.

Sir L. Heald: Is the hon. and learned Gentleman saying that the Government should have no policy in relation to great moral and social issues?

Mr. Simon Mahon: The Government, in the view of many hon. Members, have afforded a tremendous amount of Government and Parliamentary time to so-called private Bills, including this Bill, of great social importance. Some of us regret this. But does not my hon. and learned Friend think, coming from Liverpool, as I do, that the introduction of the Merchant Navy Shipping Bill might have been more important?

The Solicitor-General: I have endeavoured previously to deal with the Government's position on this Bill, because it is desirable to get it clear. But I should say about the intervention of the right hon. and learned Member for Chertsey (Sir L. Heald) and the helpful intervention of my hon. Friend the Member for Bootle (Mr. Simon Mahon) that it seems axiomatic that we have certain classes of legislation of great social importance, such as we are now considering, on which opinion departs from ordinary party divisions. In that sense—and the right hon. and learned Gentleman must permit me to follow this up—I submit that it is appropriate that the Government should follow the course of providing the opportunity to the House to arrive at and, to that extent, facilitating a decision of he House upon matters of this importance.
That is our position on this matter, but, as I say, that does not diminish in the least degree the duty that I have, which I mentioned earlier, to deal with points of law that may arise. I intervene for that purpose, largely because of the direct invitation to do so which the hon. Member for Plymouth, Devonport (Dame Joan Vickers) put to me. I have not intervened previously—it may be that I would not have intervened at all but for what the hon. Lady said—because it seemed to me that in the debate on this new Clause questions of law, in the sense that I apply to the term, had not arisen, although one or two matters arose which came near them.
My hon. Friend the Member for Bristol, South (Mr. Wilkins)—whose personal reference to myself I appreciate and reciprocate—mentioned the argument that I presented in Committee when I dealt with the effect of the Clause which we were then discussing upon Section 33 of the Matrimonial Causes Act, 1965. In my treatment of the matter then I explained that the language of Clause 2—

Mr. Simon Mahon: On a point of order. In view of the fact that the Solicitor-General said that we are debating social issues of great social consequence to this country, may I point out that there are not forty Members present in the Chamber?

Mr. Deputy Speaker (Mr. Harry Gourlay): It is too late to raise that point of order.

Mr. Wilkins: May I point out that it is not yet 1.15 p.m.?

Mr. Deputy Speaker: I must point out to the hon. Member that, in accordance with Standing Orders, that point of order cannot be raised after eleven minutes past One o'clock.

The Solicitor-General: I was saying that Clause 2 appeared to me to leave unaffected the provisions of Section 33 of the Matrimonial Causes Act, 1965. What I said then about Clause 2 is applicable in like measure to this new Clause. I trust that will give some satisfaction to my hon. Friend.
Another point that arose which may well be regarded as a point of law, was the correct construction of the language of the Clause, the point referred to by the hon. Member for Hendon, South (Sir H. Lucas-Tooth). I listened with great care to what my hon. Friend the Member for Pontypool (Mr. Abse) had to say about that, and I echo the view that he expressed. I understood him to say that he would like to look at this point in the light of the argument. By all means. I think that a possible conflict in the overlap between this new Clause and Clause 6 needs watching. That was my impression. But there is substance in the distinction which my hon. Friend sought to draw between the case of the respondent filing in effect a defence and the case where he

does not do so. I agree that there is a point there and I am glad that the sponsor is going to look at it.
It would be wrong for me to go any distance at all in seeking to guide the House on the interpretation which I think that a court is likely to apply to the expression "grave hardship" in this regard. I feel that I ought to be extremely careful before doing anything like that. I will say that the courts will have regard to the issue of gravity in all the surrounding circumstances. I do not think that I should go beyond that. However, I suggest that it is often desirable—and I think in this instance it is desirable—for a Bill to use—

Mr. Simon Mahon: Mr. Simon Mahon rose—

The Solicitor-General: —an expression of general application and to leave the interpretation of it to the judges. That is what we are doing here. I have referred in other connections to the law governing the interpretation of statutes when one comes to deal with an expression of general application. Its generality is limited only by a consideration of its fitness for the purpose with which the statute is concerned. Subject to that, I do not think that there is any limitation which I could properly indicate would be applied by the judges in their consideration of an expression of this kind.

Mr. Peter Mahon: I think that hon. Members would be profoundly disappointed if my hon. and learned Friend did not give us the benefit of his advice and this matter were left within the jurisdiction of the judges. If that were to happen it would be a cause for lamentation in this House.

The Solicitor-General: I have a duty to my hon. Friend as I have to every other hon. Member to explain what I conceive to be the effect of language in a Bill. There would be a real danger, and it would be no service to the House, if I were to launch out into an anticipation of the treatment which judges will apply to the expression "grave hardship".

Mr. Bruce Campbell: Is not the hon. and learned Gentleman saying that we shall leave it to the judges to legislate? Are not we supposed to be legislating? We are leaving this Clause to be decided


by the judges. That means that we are asking them to legislate.

The Solicitor-General: I do not agree with that view. I take the view that it is proper, to use a phrase like "grave hardship". We might have said "hardship", and left it there. The effect of introducing the expression "grave hardship", instead of simply making a reference to hardship, is in itself an important indication to the judges of the intention of Parliament in this regard.

Dame Irene Ward: I think that the Solicitior-General is too modest. The House is longing for the hon. and learned Gentleman to launch out. That is what we are all here for. Will he please launch out and give us some legal guidance, because that is what the House wants. We want legal guidance from one of the Law Officers of the Crown who is charged with the duty of giving legal guidance to the House. Will the Solicitor-General please launch out so that we know where we are, which we do not at the moment.

The Solicitor-General: I do not think that I shall respond to the hon. Lady's invitation to launch out in a fashion which I have indicated would be inappropriate and mistaken.

Mr. Walter Alldritt: Mr. Walter Alldritt (Liverpool, Scotland) rose—

The Solicitor-General: I suggest that the sponsors of the Bill have given a clear and fair account of the effect of the Clause. It has been conceded that this all arises from their genuine and objective endeavour to meet criticisms of the Clause as it originally appeared in the Bill, and which derived from the hon. and learned Member for Oldham, West (Mr. Bruce Campbell).

Mr. Alldritt: Mr. Alldritt rose—

The Solicitor-General: I think that the criticisms correctly levelled against Clause 4 have been substantially met by the new Clause, and that broadly the safeguards on the issue of financial hardship occurring in the language of the Clause are appropriate to the requirements of the case.

Mr. Alldritt: Mr. Alldritt rose—

Mr. Peter M. Jackson: Mr. Peter M. Jackson rose in his place and claimed to move, That the Question be now put.

Question put, That the Question be put:—

The House divided: Ayes 74. Noes 24.

Division No. 167.]
AYES
[1.27 p.m.


Abse, Leo
Haseldine, Norman
Peart, Rt. Hn. Fred


Albu, Austen
Henig, Stanley
Prentice, Rt. Hn. R. E.


Atkinson, Norman (Tottenham)
Hobden, Dennis
Price, Christopher (Perry Barr)


Bidwell, Sydney
Hooley, Frank
Rees, Merlyn


Booth, Albert
Howie, W.
Richard, Ivor


Bottomley, Rt. Hn. Arthur
Irvine, Sir Arthur (Edge Hill)
Roberts, Gwilym (Bedfordshire, S.)


Boyle, Rt. Hn. Sir Edward
Jeger, Mrs. Lena (H'b'n&amp;StP'cras,S.)
Robinson, Rt. Hn. Kenneth (St. P'c'as)


Brooks, Edwin
Johnson, Carol (Lewisham, S.)
Shaw, Arnold (Ilford, S.)


Buck, Anthony (Colchester)
Johnston, Russell (Inverness)
Sheldon, Robert


Cant, R. B.
Jones, Rt. Hn. Sir Elwyn (W. Ham, S.)
Short, Mrs. Renée (W'hampton, N. E.)


Carmichael, Neil
Jones, T. Alec (Rhondda, West)
Sinclair, Sir George


Chapman, Donald
Judd, Frank
Skeffington, Arthur


Coe, Denis
Kerr, Russell (Feltham)
Spriggs, Leslie


de Freitas, Rt. Hn, Sir Geoffrey
Lipton, Marcus
Strauss, Rt. Hn, G. R.


Dewar, Donald
Luard, Evan
Urwin, T. W,


Dunnett, Jack
Lyons, Edward (Bradford, E.)
van Straubenzee, W. R.


Dunwoody, Mrs. Gwyneth (Exeter)
Macdonald, A. H.
Weitzman, David


Ellis, John
Marks, Kenneth
Whitlock, William


English, Michael
Marquand, David
Williams, Alan (Swansea, W.)


Fernyhough, E.
Maxwell-Hyslop, R. J.
Williams, Alan Lee (Hornchurch)


Fletcher, Ted (Darlington)
Mikardo, Ian
Wilson, William (Coventry, S.)


Forrester, John
Molloy, William
Winnick, David


Freeson, Reginald
Ogden, Eric



Griffiths, Eddie (Brightside)
Owen, Dr. David (Plymouth, S'tn)
TELLERS FOR THE AYES:


Hamilton, William (Fife, W.)
Pannell, Rt. Hn. Charles
Dr. Hugh D. Gray and


Hamling, William
Parker, John (Dagenham)
Mr. Peter M. Jackson.




NOES


Alldritt Walter
Fortescue, Tim
Lee, John (Reading)


Braine, Bernard
Goodhew, Victor
McNair-Wilson, M. (Walthamstow, E.)


Costain, A. P.
Heald, Rt. Hn. Sir Lionel
Mahon, Peter (Preston, S.)


Delargy, Hugh
Hill, J. E. B.
Mahon, Simon (Bootle)


Doughty, Charles
Hogg, Rt. Hn. Quintin
Peel, John


Elliot, Capt. Walter (Carshalton)
Kerby, Capt. Henry
Powell, Rt. Hn. J. Enoch




Rankin, John
Summerskill, Hn. Dr. Shirley
TELLERS FOR THE NOES:


Rhys Williams, Sir Brandon
Ward, Dame Irene
Mr. W. A. Wilkins and


Speed, Keith
Worsley, Marcus
Mr. Bruce Campbell.

Mr. Deputy Speaker (Mr. Harry Gourlay): The Question is not decided in the affirmative and the debate therefore resumes.

Mr. Victor Goodhew: Before the Closure was moved, I thought that we were to hear some further comments from the Solicitor-General. He was in the middle of his speech when the Closure was moved. I will not ask the hon. and learned Gentleman to get up just now as he seems quite happy to be reclining in his seat, but I must say that what he said about the Government's neutrality in this matter is humbug and I hope that no one in this House is expected to accept otherwise.
Not only do the Government constantly pick out certain Private Member's Bills from the list of those awaiting discussion but they pick out those which are of great moral importance and say to the House, "This is a very important Bill"—and this applies whether it be the abolition of the death penalty, legalised abortion or legalised homosexuality.

Mr. Abse: On a point of order, Mr. Deputy Speaker. Even my hon. and learned Friend the Solicitor-General strayed, in my view, beyond the terms of the new Clauses under discussion and I submit that there can be no justification for the matter being enlarged.

Mr. Deputy Speaker: I appreciate that point and perhaps the hon. Member for St. Albans (Mr. Goodhew) will come back to the subject of the debate.

Mr. Simon Mahon: On a point of order, Mr. Deputy Speaker. I seek your guidance because, in my ignorance, I am not aware of what should be happening in this situation. I have been here throughout the debate, as you are aware, and I understood that my hon. and learned Friend the Solicitor-General had not finished his speech to the House. My hon. Friend the Member for Liverpool, Scotland (Mr. Alldritt) had risen at least twice during my hon. and learned Friend's speech and then, on the third occasion, my hon. and learned Friend gave way to him, at which stage my hon. Friend the Member for The High Peak (Mr. Peter M. Jackson) made the second of his brief appearances in the

Chamber and moved the Closure. If this were not a breach of the procedure of the House, was it not at least a bad breach of its normal courtesy?

Mr. Deputy Speaker: I am seized of that point of order but it is in order for an hon. Member to rise at any stage and move, That the Question be now put.

The Solicitor-General: Further to that point of order, Mr. Deputy Speaker. My recollection is that I was just on the point of bringing my remarks to a conclusion when I observed my hon. Friend the Member for Liverpool, Scotland (Mr. Alldritt) to be desirous of putting a question to me and I was yielding to him for that purpose when the Closure Motion was made.

Mr. Goodhew: I hope that the hon. Member for Liverpool, Scotland (Mr. Alldritt) will have the opportunity to pursue the point he wished to make when I resume my seat.
The Government cannot justly claim that they have been neutral in all these vital matters when other Private Members' Bills are not selected which are equally worthy of time and when they do not give proper advice to the House about whether they have any policy or views on the Bills they have picked out. The position is not satisfactory and the Government should say clearly that they are giving preferential treatment to the Bills they have picked out because they want to see them on the Statute Book. That is surely the point behind the Solicitor-General's statement of neutrality today.

Mr. Alldritt: I am grateful to my hon. and learned Friend the Solicitor-General for having given way to me earlier. I wanted to ask him about a matter about which I am particularly concerned. He knows me well enough to realise that I am not usually emphatic and am always prepared to look at both sides and to try and find a compromise. The second paragraph of new Clause 1 reads:
For the purposes of this section hardship shall include the loss of the chance of acquiring any thing which the respondent might acquire if the marriage were not dissolved.
Is my hon. and learned Friend expecting us to accept from him the argument


that the judges ought to decide this issue? Surely we here must decide the matter. If we do not know the answer today, how can the judges arrive at a conclusion?

The Solicitor-General: Of course it is for the House to decide whether these lines should go into the Bill. The last three lines of the new Clause go further in the direction which I understood the hon. and learned Member for Oldham, West (Mr. Bruce Campbell)—to this extent I agree with him—thought was appropriate. We are taking a word of general application, "hardship". Then, because it might be thought too wide an issue to leave to the judges a decision on what constitutes hardship, the sponsors are making it plain, in the one instance, that the hardship has to be grave and, in the other, in the last three lines of the Clause, that there are certain matters which the judges must regard as included in the expression "hardship".

Mr. Bruce Campbell: As we are giving the judges that much guidance, can there be any good reason for not giving the further guidance which new Clause 6 would provide? Contrary to what the Solicitor-General said, it does not limit them but simply says that, in determining what hardship means, they "shall have regard to". If one is appropriate, why not the other?

Mr. Deputy Speaker: The Question is—

Sir L. Heald: May I ask for your guidance, Mr. Deputy Speaker? Several hon. Members have already said that their view on new Clause 1 would be materially affected by the view of the House on the new Clause proposed by my hon. and learned Friend the Member for Oldham, West (Mr. Bruce Campbell). I understood from Mr. Speaker's reply—he gave no Ruling—that he appreciated the possibility of doing something about that. Of course, we should have to have the agreement of the sponsors, but at least two of my hon. Friends have said that their attitude would be materially affected by a decision on that. If it were to be carried, I should not pursue my proposal, although, in the interests of clarity and of hon. Members being able to make their decision in the most satisfactory way, that might be thought desirable.

Mr. Deputy Speaker: I understand that Mr. Speaker has not selected New Clause 6 for a Division, and that Ruling stands.

Question put, That the Clause be read a Second time:—

The House proceeded to a Division:—Mr. DONALD DEWAR and Mr. PETER M. JACKSON were appointed Tellers for the Ayes, but no Member being willing to act as Teller for the Noes, Mr. DEPUTY SPEAKER declared that the Ayes had it.

Question put, That the Clause be added to the Bill:—

The House proceeded to a Division:—

Dame Irene Ward: (seated and covered): On a point of order. What is happening to the Amendments to new Clause 1, in the name of my right hon. and learned Friend the Member for Chertsey (Sir L. Heald)? I did not hear those put to the House.

Mr. Deputy Speaker: They were selected for debate, but not for a Division.

Dame Irene Ward: (seated and covered): On a point of order. I understand from my Friends around me that these Amendments were selected for Division.

Mr. Deputy Speaker: Perhaps I misunderstood the hon. Lady. I thought that she was referring to the Amendments to new Clause 1. If she means Amendments Nos. 14 and 20, these will be called for Division at the appropriate time.

Mr. Wilkins: (seated and covered): On a point of order. We were given to understand that new Clause 1 was called for a Division and that the two Amendments of the right hon. and learned Member for Chertsey (Sir L. Heald) would also be available for a vote. We are now completely confused about this.

Mr. Deputy Speaker: If I understood the hon. Gentleman correctly, he was referring to Amendments Nos. 14 and 20. Am I correct? Perhaps he will repeat his point of order.

Mr. Simon Mahon: (seated and covered): On a point of order. Without in the slightest offending the decorum of this House, may I suggest that, in view of our present difficulties and the confusion


which exists among many hon. Members, we should have the voting procedure started again from the beginning?

Mr. Deputy Speaker: The question before the House is, That the Clause be added to the Bill.

Dame Irene Ward: (seated and covered): On a point of order. As we seem to be in a cloud, would you, Mr. Deputy Speaker, kindly indicate whether we shall vote on the two Amendments of my right hon. and learned Friend the Member for Chertsey (Sir L. Heald)? I understood that there would be a vote on them. Shall we vote on them after we have passed the Clause? How could that be in order?

Mr. Deputy Speaker: If the hon. Lady is referring to the Amendments to Clause 1—

Dame Irene Ward: (seated and covered): Not "Clause 1", Mr. Deputy Speaker; it is "new Clause 1".

Mr. Deputy Speaker: I beg the hon. Lady's pardon—new Clause 1. If she is referring to those Amendments, they were selected for debate but not for Division. The House is in the process of dividing on whether the Clause should be added to the Bill.

Dame Irene Ward: (seated and covered): I understand—I may be wrong—that the Amendments were selected for a vote.

Mr. Deputy Speaker: I have already stated quite clearly that they were not selected for Division.

The House having divided: Ayes 86, Noes 22.

Division No. 168.]
AYES
[1.44 p.m.


Abse, Leo
Hamling, William
Parker, John (Dagenham)


Albu, Austen
Haseldine, Norman
Peel, John


Atkinson, Norman (Tottenham)
Henig, Stanley
Percival, Ian


Bell, Ronald
Hobden, Dennis
Prentice, Rt. Hn. R. E.


Bessell, Peter
Hooley, Frank
Price, Christopher (Perry Barr)


Bidwell, Sydney
Horden, Peter
Rees, Merlyn


Booth, Albert
Howie, W.
Reynolds, Rt. Hn. G. W.


Bottomley, Rt. Hn. Arthur
Hunt, John
Richard, Ivor


Boyle, R. Hn. Sir Edward
Irvine, Sir Arthur (Edge Hill)
Roberts, Gwilym (Bedfordshire, S.)


Bray, Dr. Jeremy
Jeger, Mrs. Lena (H'b'n &amp; St. P'cras, S.)
Robinson, Rt. Hn. Kenneth (St. P'c'as)


Brooks, Edwin
Jenkins, Hugh (Putney)
Roebuck, Roy


Buck, Antony (Colchester)
Johnson, Carol (Lewisham, S.)
Shaw, Arnold (Ilford, S.)


Campbell, B. (Oldham, W.)
Jones, Rt. Hn. Sir Elwyn (W. Ham, S.)
Sheldon, Robert


Cant, R. B.
Jones, T. Alec (Rhondda, West)
Short, Mrs. Renée (W'hampton, N. E.)


Carmichael, Neil
Judd, Frank
Sinclair, Sir George


Chapman, Donald
Kerr, Dr. David (W'worth, Central)
Spriggs, Leslie


Coe, Denis
Kerr, Russell (Feltham)
Strauss, Rt. Hn. G. R.


de Freitas, Rt. Hn. Sir Geoffrey
Lipton, Marcus
Tuck, Raphael


Driberg, Tom
Luard, Evan
Urwin, T. W.


Dunnett, Jack
Lyons, Edward (Bradford, E.)
van Straubenzee, W. R.


Dunwoody, Mrs. Gwyneth (Exeter)
Macdonald, A. H.
Vickers, Dame Joan


Ellis, John
Marks, Kenneth
Weitzman, David


English, Michael
Marquand, David
Williams, Alan Lee (Hornchurch)


Eyre, Reginald
Maxwell-Hyslop, R. J.
Wilson, William (Coventry, S.)


Fernyhough, E.
Mikardo, Ian
Winnick, David


Fletcher, Ted (Darlington)
Molloy, William
Worsley, Marcus


Forrester, John
Mulley, Rt. Hn. Frederick



Freeson, Reginald
Munro-Lucas-Tooth, Sir Hugh
TELLERS FOR THE AYES:


Griffiths, Eddie (Brightside)
Owen, Dr. David (Plymouth, S'tn)
Mr. Donald Dewar and


Hamilton, William (Fife, W.)
Pannell, Rt. Hn. Charles
Mr. Peter Jackson.




NOES


Alldritt, Walter
Heald, Rt. Hn. Sir Lionel
Rhys Williams, Sir Brandon


Biffen, John
Hill, J. E. B.
Ward, Dame Irene


Biggs-Davison, John
Hogg, Rt. Hn. Quintin
Wilkins, W. A.


Costain, A. P.
Kerby, Capt. Henry
Wilson, Geoffrey (Truro)


Delargy, Hugh
Lee, John (Reading)



Doughty, Charles
Longden, Gilbert
TELLERS FOR THE NOES:


Elliot, Capt. Walter (Carshalton)
McNair-Wilson M. (Walthamstow, E.)
Mr. Victor Goodhew and


Fortescue, Tim
Mahon, Peter (Preston, S.)
Mr. Simon Mahon.


Gray, Dr. Hugh (Yarmouth)
Ogden, Eric

New Clause 8

DECEPTION

Where the court is satisfied that the petitioner has attempted to deceive the court, it shall dismiss the petition, or if a decree nisi has already been made, it shall rescind the said decree nisi and dismiss the petition, if the court is of the opinion that the deception was of such a serious nature that it would be wrong to grant the decree.—[Sir L. Heald.]

Brought up, and read the First time.

Sir L. Heald: I beg to move, That the Clause be read a Second time.
This is a very important Clause. It has a remarkable history which I must explain for the benefit of hon. Members who were not concerned with the Committee stages of the last Bill or this Bill.
The Clause, apart from one addition to it, was in the original Bill. We were told that it was inserted as a result of what the Law Commission said. In Committee on the last Bill there was an extraordinary day, as it was described by the hon. Member for Coventry, South (Mr. William Wilson), who was the sponsor of the Bill. The Clause was thrown out by five votes to four, although, apparently, it had been regarded by the Law Commission as essential. When the present Bill was introduced there was no such Clause in it. I therefore tabled this new Clause. I hoped that reason would prevail and that it would be said that there was unfortunate confusion on the last occasion and that it would be accepted.
The hon. Member for Coventry, South, who I am glad to see in his place—he and I have been on opposite sides in this matter for some time—said that it was a day of such confusion that anything could have taken place.
The Clause does not require a great deal of explanation, but it deserves having this said about it. It has been argued that there is a danger that if this Bill comes into operation the courts will have little to do with this matter. The hon. Member for Yarmouth (Dr. Gray) did not think that the courts should have anything to do with it at all. In fact they do.
The important feature of the new Clause is that it draws the attention of all concerned to the fact that divorce is a very serious matter which will con

tinue to be dealt with on a judicial basis and that there must be safeguards against the possibility of the court being deceived. We originally put down a new Clause as follows:
Where the court is satisfied that the petitioner has attempted to deceive the court, it shall dismiss the petition, if the court is of the opinion that the deception was of such a serious nature that it would be wrong to grant the decree.
2.0 p.m.
It was said that this was so unlikely to happen and so rare that it would be sufficient to leave it to the law of perjury and contempt of court. That was not the view of the Law Commission and was not, in my belief, the view of the judges. It was highly desirable that it should be made clear that the judges have an overriding power and discretion to dismiss a petition if it appeared at any stage that there had been attempt to deceive the court.
When the matter was being discussed in Committee, one hon. Member said "The trouble which is most likely to arise is that it will not be discovered that this attempt is being made until after the decree nisi has been reduced." The nice, technical objection was raised to the new Clause that we were not dealing with that matter because we were dealing with the question of dismissing the petition.
My hon. and learned Friend the Member for Oldham, West (Mr. Bruce Campbell) pointed out that as a matter of law it was covered by the words "dismissing the petition". But at the same time the sponsors, anxious to avoid any defilement of their precious Bill, said that they must take the technical point and, as the Amendment did not cover what it was supposed to cover, they would refuse it.
We have now put down the new Clause with the additional words. I apologise for the legal verbiage, but this is the fault of the sponsors rather than any fault of mine. It is done in this way in order to meet the pettifogging objection which was raised to the new Clause in Committee. The House will now see that it reads:
Where the court is satisfied that the petitioner has attempted to deceive the court, it shall dismiss the petition, or if a decree has already been made, it shall rescind the said decree and dismis the petition …
That wording is in effect taken from another Act, so that it is perfectly proper wording to use. I understand that my


hon. and learned Friend the Member for Oldham, West is satisfied that it is the correct procedure.
Therefore, we can now come to the merits of the matter. During the proceedings last year the Solicitor-General advised the Committee, though not with any great enthusiasm, to keep in the Clause which the Law Commission thought ought to be there. But no notice was taken of what he said.

Mr. Peter Mahon: For the benefit of the unitiated, will the right hon. and learned Gentleman kindly give hon. Members like myself an interpretation of the words a mensa et toro?

Sir L. Heald: It is from the "table and hearth", the other man's table. As mensa was the first Latin word we learnt, I can only assume that the hon. Gentleman was not perhaps fortunate in that respect.
This is a serious matter and although I have no authority to speak on behalf of Her Majesty's judges, nor would I presume to do so, I suggest that those who are engaged in the practice of the divorce law in the law courts feel strongly that it is highly desirable, even if these matters are likely to occur only occasionally, that it should be made clear to everybody that this is a most grave matter since it involves a question of deception of the court.
Now that we have cleared away the technical point, we are in the situation that there has been no effective argument against this Clause of any kind, except the argument that it is not really necessary. If it was a valid objection to Government legislation that it was not really necessary, then we would have very many less Acts of Parliament than we have today.
I sincerely hope that on this occasion, following the slight improvement in the sponsors' whole attitude towards amendment of the Bill, as was shown in the new Clause with which we have just dealt, this matter will be dealt with on a serious level. I am not able to speak with knowledge of the practice, but I know that there are those present with knowledge of it who will agree that the hon. Member for Oldham, West was right when he stated that it was wrong to say that this sort of thing could never

happen. Indeed, he made it clear that the point involving discovery after the decree nisi should be safeguarded. It might be that those engaged in such a nefarious enterprise might think "If we can arrange it so that it will not be found out until after decree nisi, then nothing will be done about it." We believe that something should be done about it.

Dr. Gray: I will reply to the allegation made by the hon. and learned Gentleman that I do not think divorces should come before the courts in any circumstances. I have never argued that. I argued that there should be two categories of divorce. A case should not come before the courts when there is no dispute over property or children. I suggested that somebody like a registrar of births, deaths and marriages could deal with the case. But I said that any case involving a dispute about children or property should come before the courts.
I followed the hon. and learned Gentleman's argument with interest, but it did not seem to me to be as pellucid as his arguments generally are. He did not persuade me that there was any special reason that if the courts were deceived in a divorce case this was much graver than if they were deceived over any other case. Of course, it is a grave matter if the courts are deceived, but there are already powers in the law for dealing with people who deceive the courts. Why should a special provision be made in the case of the divorce courts?
It is not true to say that all eminent lawyers concerned with divorce think that such a Clause should be included. I originally put down an Amendment that this Clause should be deleted from the original Bill. I did so at the request of one of the most eminent divorce lawyers in the country, who thought that this new Clause was redundant. I am glad that the Law Officers, after a pause of time, were persuaded about my arguments on that occasion. There are sufficient powers for dealing with those who deceive the courts as the law stands, and there is no reason why the law should be specially weighted.

Mr. Peter Mahon: In fairness, is it right for my hon. Friend to say that the court has certain powers when so many instances are coming to light where


the court has not the power to enforce the law which it is anxious to preserve?

Dr. Gray: My hon. Friend has a point. It is sometimes difficult for the courts to enforce the law in some respects, but they have the power to punish all those people who deceive them, no matter what may be the type of case. I see no reason why people in divorce cases should be much more heavily penalised than other people who deceive the courts.

Mr. Bruce Campbell: I support the proposed new Clause because I think that it provides a very necessary safeguard for the future administration of divorce law which, if it is to be conducted under the terms of new Clause No. 1, will provide respondents with a defence. As a result of that new Clause—which I was glad to support, although I do not think that it has gone far enough—a respondent will be able to say to the court: "The granting of a decree will cause me grave financial and other hardship. For that reason I ask you not to grant the decree." This defence will, undoubtedly, be made predominantly under paragraph (e), of Clause 2(1), where the respondent is completely innocent of any matrimonial offence, and where the court will be sympathetic to her if she is able to show that, innocent though she is, her guilty husband seeks to divorce her and that, as a result, she will suffer grave financial hardship.
Let us suppose that the husband, in order to meet that defence, tells a cock-and-bull story: "I have put aside a fund of £10,000 which, as soon as I have the divorce, I will make available to my former wife to provide for her future. She will, therefore, not suffer grave financial or other hardship, but will be able to live comfortably off". Let us suppose that the judge accepts that story, and as a result grants a decree. The wife then discovers that there is no such fund, that no provision has been made for her, and that she will suffer grave financial hardship. She will be able to avail herself of the provisions of the new Clause, and tell the court, "My husband has deceived you". The decree can then be rescinded, and the petition dismissed.
The hon. Member for Yarmouth (Dr. Gray) said that the courts already have ample powers without this addition but,

with respect, I challenge that statement. In the example I have given, what can the woman do if this new Clause is not added? All she can do is to go to the Court of Appeal. If she is paying for the case, it is prohibitively expensive. If she seeks legal aid, she has to persuade the legal aid committee to give her legal aid. Then she has to persuade the Court of Appeal that, because her husband told a lie on one facet of the case, the court should set aside the decree and either dismiss the petition or order a new hearing.
That is a prolonged, time-consuming, expensive and, if I may say so, a somewhat chancy business. The Court of Appeal may not allow the appeal. The judges may say, "The husband did deceive the court on that particular matter, but, taking all the matters into account, we think that the decree should stand". The new Clause would give the respondent the right to tell the court that the other party had deceived it. If the court was of the opinion that the deception was of a serious nature and that it would be wrong to allow the decree, it could rescind the decree.

2.15 p.m.

Dr. Gray: Will the hon. and learned Gentleman clarify what he says about the deception being of a serious nature? Does he mean serious in general, or serious in that the man or woman concerned has lied in relation to the irretrievable breakdown of the marriage? I agree that it is a chancy business, and that the Supreme Court would not take into consideration a single lie if it did not concern the one principle of the irretrievable breakdown of the marriage. Is anything of that nature serious provided it does not contradict this basic principle?

Mr. Campbell: I suggest that any deception would be serious if it was of a nature which affected or might have affected the order of the court. I do not suggest that the deception should be confined solely to irretrievable breakdown. The example I gave was not connected with irretrievable breakdown, but with the grave financial hardship which the respondent might suffer as a result of the divorce. But it was a deception of a kind which, under new Clause No. 1, would have enabled the judge to refuse a decree.
The learned Solicitor-General will no doubt tell us again that it will be for the judges to work out what they think is deception of a serious nature but, if I may presume to say so, a deception would be of a serious nature if it might well have affected the decision of the court. I agree with the hon. Member for Yarmouth that very often this would be related to the question of irretrievable breakdown.
Let us hope that before we have done with the Bill we shall have excluded paragraph (e) from Clause 2, but as it is there now, let me use it in an example. Suppose the petitioner says to the court, "I have been separated from my wife for five years. Therefore, under paragraph (e) the marriage has irretrievably broken down. Please give me a divorce." The truth is that he has been separated from her for only three years. He has deceived the court in a material particular, and that material particular goes to the question of irretrievable breakdown, because Parliament will have decided, if paragraph (e) is retained, that five years' separation is good evidence that a marriage has irretrievably broken down.
We now see why it is essential to have a Clause, worded as this new Clause is, enabling the decree to be rescinded. The court will not discover the deception at the trial. After all, if the judge realised while the case was being heard that the separation had lasted only three years he would dismiss the petition, anyhow, because the first requisite for a decree had not been complied with.
The new Clause is designed primarily to deal with the situation in which the judge has been successfully deceived and has granted the decree, and then in the three months that must elapse between decree nisi and decree absolute it is discovered that the court has been hoodwinked in a serious matter.
I am sure that all hon. Members will think it important that the law should continue to be held in high regard and the proposal in the new Clause is very salutary. It lets people see that they can get a divorce if they prove certain things: but, let them deceive the court, and though a man may have been separated from his wife for a hundred years, and

although she may have committed adultery with 14 different men on 101 different occasions—no divorce.
This is a healthy provision, and will make people realise that perjury, for one thing, does not pay. One of the saddest things in our divorce situation is that people in the street who, in the main, do not know anything about it, say of divorce cases that they are rigged; that they are framed; that they are arranged; that they are organised. I believe that is thoroughly untrue. As one who has spent a lot of time working in the divorce court I have hardly ever come across a case in which I have even suspected that sort of thing.
Nevertheless, it is what the public appear to think when we listen to the way in which they talk and when we read what some writers write in the newspapers. This Clause would be a healthy improvement, because it would make plain to anyone who had that sort of idea—that they could go to the divorce court and tell any story and get away with it—that they would then be made to realise that if they had deceived the court they would not get the divorce or the relief for which they were asking.
The hon. Member for Yarmouth, in talking about the powers the courts already have to deal with cases of deception, possibly had in mind that people could always be charged at a criminal court with perjury, but that is not easy. Perjury is a very difficult crime to prove. In any case it involves the beginning of criminal proceedings and although there are such things as private prosecutions one has to have the co-operation of the police to bring a charge of that gravity. All this is beyond the capability of some poor wife who, after the discovery that the fund of £10,000 does not exist, or after learning that her husband obtained the divorce by saying that they had been separated for five years when in fact they had been separated for only three, wishes to go back to the court.

Mr. Peter Mahon: Is the hon. and learned Member saying that, even if this deception he has so eloquently outlined takes place it would be difficult to indict a person who was so culpable?

Mr. Campbell: Indeed it would. I am not a criminal lawyer, but I know that a very high standard of proof is needed


in a perjury case. There must be corroboration. One would want very clear evidence to put before the criminal court. Also, the co-operation of the police would be needed. A clear case, of course, could be brought to the criminal court and no doubt the police would co-operate, but how much simpler it would be for the wife who does not want to put her husband in prison—for her that is the worst thing that could happen because it would kill the goose that lays the golden eggs—to be able to see that she could be provided for if there is to be a divorce.
If the husband deceives the court about the sort of provision he will make for her or about anything else, she would be able to go back to the court and call evidence to show that her husband deceived the court. Then the judge would not have to dismiss the petition. My right hon. and learned Friend has not suggested that the judge must do so, but the Clause says:
Where the court is satisfied that the petitioner has attempted to deceive the court, it shall dismiss the petition, or if a decree nisi has already been made, it shall rescind the said decree nisi and dismiss the petition, if the court is of the opinion that the deception was of such a serious nature that it would be wrong to grant the decree.
The judge is left with that much discretion. Unless he is satisfied that the deception was of "a serious nature" he ought not to dismiss the petition. Husbands and wives will not run to the courts to complain about every little falsehood which may have been told, but this protection will be provided. I support the Clause for that reason and also because it would help to keep high public regard for the law.

Sir B. Rhys Williams: I feel obliged to oppose my right hon. and learned Friend the Member for Chertsey (Sir L. Heald) in his suggested new Clause 8 for precisely the same reasons as I opposed the previous new Clause. It seeks to water down what most people who support this princple, as I do, regard as a first-class conception—the idea of irretrievable breakdown. Irretrievable breakdown is seen not to have taken place if it would result in hardship to the parties and it would be deemed not to have taken place if the parties were untruthful people. This seems a further diminution of the effectiveness of the Bill. The first-class brains, particularly the legal brains, who have attended to the drafting of the Bill

should have been able to find an answer to this.
It is true that a Bill of this importance, and particularly of such moral significance, will cast extremely long shadows. It would be quite out of order to discuss the question of hardship further under this Clause, but my hon. and learned Friend the Member for Oldham, West (Mr. Bruce Campbell) made quite clear that into the court will come people with an important interest in deceiving the court, possibly more in actions of this nature than in actions of any other kind. If legal opinion is that there will be a risk of serious deception of the court by the parties because of their anxiety to obtain divorce it should be possible for the court to protect itself in some other way against taking a wrong decision as a result of such falsehoods being expressed.
It seems most anomalous that the court should be forced into a position in which it has to say, "Your marriage has survived because you have proved yourself a disgraceful liar," but that would be the effect. I am sure that my hon. and learned Friend does not intend that the Bill should be amended in a way that would make that happen. I take exception to the phrasing in the last line of the new Clause which says that the court
would be wrong to grant the decree".
This puts the court into the position of a governess who has to decide what penalty is due for whopping lies and if they are whopping enough.

Sir L. Heald: The House has already agreed to that expression, after long discussion, in the first new Clause. I should have thought that it would be accepted that the phrase could be used in this Clause.

Sir B. Rhys Williams: I have not studied all the proceedings in Committee, but I thought that it was not out of order to comment on the wording on Report. I thought that was the right thing to do. It would be most objectionable if wording as loose as this—using the word "wrong" without making certain whether it means wrong in a moral or a purely legal sense—should go into the Bill.
Further, an unhappy situation might arise in that years after a divorce had


been declared nisi one of the parties might be able to get it rescinded by producing evidence that the other party to the action had disgracefully misled the court. My hon. and learned Friends may tell me that that would not be possible, but it seems to me that it would be possible.
This has been very largely a lawyers' Bill. As someone who is not legally qualified I am entitled to call upon the lawyers to recognise that there is a real problem and also to ask them to define precisely how it should be solved.

2.30 p.m.

Mr. Costain: I was fascinated by the arguments presented by my hon. Friend the Member for Kensington, South (Sir B. Rhys Williams) against the Clause, although I did not find his arguments convincing. I believe that the Clause would apply only when the decree nisi had been granted and not after the decree absolute. I have always understood that the period between the two is of short duration. Will my hon. Friend make it clear whether he appreciates that the Clause applies only during the decree nisi period, which I assume could not normally be more than six months? Does not that consideration cause him to change his opinion?
I support the Clause because I believe that people who go to the divorce court should appreciate that in all courts it is an offence to commit perjury but that in a court where personal matters are concerned it should be made a definite and more serious offence. The Clause would strengthen the Bill. My hon. Friend said that one result of the Clause might well be that someone who told a whopping lie would have his marriage preserved although it had irretrievably broken down. He might also have argued that a number of marriages are kept together because the husband is able to tell whopping lies.

Dame Irene Ward: Or the wife.

Mr. Costain: I accept the correction, although if I had made the underlying point myself I should have been accused of sex prejudice. I hope that the House will accept the Clause. It would not do more than make it apparent that people cannot get away with telling

lies in the divorce court. It would discourage them from so doing.

Mr. Simon Mahon: I agree with the hon. Member for Folkestone and Hythe (Mr. Costain) that it is not so much the lie that is told that keeps the marriage together as the way of telling the lie.
As one who has lived a long time and who has tried to get through married life more through charm than through ability, I support the Clause. Nobody in the House should stand warrant for anyone going into any court to deceive. How low can a person get when, on the one hand, he goes into a church and says, "For better or for worse; in sickness and in health; for richer for poorer; till death us do part", and he means it, as most of us have meant it, and then, on the other hand, because somebody intervenes he deceives his wife or the wife deceives him and is prepared to deceive the law? In the walk of life from which I come, and on the dockside, anybody who told a lie was the basest of men. It was always said that you could catch a thief but you could never catch a liar. Most of us, from whatever aspect of society we come, despise people who tell lies for their own benefit.
I am very annoyed with the Government. They are giving time to the Bill, and they are also putting their sanctions behind it. What that does to someone with 40 years standing in the Labour Party is beyond description. I shall maintain this view inside and outside the House. I am grateful to the right hon. and learned Member for Chertsey, (Sir L. Heald), who has great legal ability, for tabling the Clause. We must all have been asked to assist wives who have asked, "Can I keep the council house?" On being asked why, the answer has been, "Because my husband has obtained a divorce". On asking when they found out, we have been told, "As usual, I was the last to get to know".
I want to present a case which I believe is not out of contex. At the moment I am playing this matter by ear, because I have lived many years among my people and I think that I know what makes them tick. The Clause seeks to prevent and to contain deception. There is a great deal of deception at all levels of society which the country would be


better without. There is much deception in world affairs which the world would be better without. There would be more peace and dignity if people would tell the truth instead of indulging in deception for their own gain.
I say to those of my colleagues who find themselves separated by such a great margin from me on this issue that I have always had my feet pretty firmly on the deck. Somebody who tells lies to break up a home, or to break up somebody else's home, or to murder a child in the womb, can go scot free in our society. The right hon. and learned Gentleman seeks to protect the country. I want an answer from the Government, in view of this legislation and in view of projected legislation, because I do not intend to waste my time all my life on supporting people with whom I do not agree.
I have said that somebody who tells lies in court to break his home or to break somebody else's home and somebody who tells lies to murder a child in the womb can go scot free, but if another man—to protect his home, to protect the moral standing of his home, to protect his marriage, to protect his wife, and to keep his wife and the children of the marriage—withdraws his labour, under the projected legislation he can be sent to gaol, although the villain who has broken up a home can be removed from all sanctions of the law.
I say this with all the experience at my command. I hope that I shall be listened to and that my warning will be heeded. I mean every word of what I am saying. If we do not agree with the right hon. and learned Gentleman, the process in which Parliament is indulging of creating a society in which the real criminals are absolved and new criminal classes of the innocent and the righteous are being created will be perpetuated. It was not originally my intention, when I came into the Chamber a short time ago, to speak on this new Clause. The words of the hon. Member for Kensington, South (Sir B. Rhys Williams) have brought me to my feet. I never thought to hear any hon. Member in any part of this House say that it does not matter whether people tell lies in court or not. But that, virtually, is what he said. Whether the matter be divorce, whether they be criminal matters,

whether they be ordinary common law matters, that is the permissive society carried to madness. Hon. Members have said that this is a mad Bill, and I agree with them, but that is not the point for the moment. What the hon. Member for Kensington, South said was that this is a good Bill and there should be no restrictions put upon it. I clearly heard him say so, and I am sure that other hon. Members did, too. With every word of that I disagree.
Assuming for a moment—I sincerely hope I am wrong—that this Bill becomes an Act, just think what things the court will have to decide under this Bill. Look at Clause 2. I am not going to read all these things out to the House because the House will be well aware of them, but Clause 2 says that where the petitioner finds out—

Mr. Deputy Speaker (Mr. Harry Gourlay): Order. I hope that the hon. and learned Member will address his remarks to new Clause 8 which is before the House.

Mr. Doughty: I am addressing my remarks to new Clause 8, but when we are to consider whether a person is obliged or not to tell the truth, we must consider on what matters he is to tell the truth. These are some of the matters, if this Bill becomes law, upon which he will be called upon to tell the truth. I am not going to read them all out but I draw attention to one or two:
that since the celebration of the marriage the respondent has committed adultery and the petitioner finds it intolerable to live with the respondent; that since the celebration of the marriage the respondent has behaved in such a way that the petitioner cannot reasonably be expected to live with the respondent".
Then there are other things in new Clause 1 which was introduced this morning. They are very searching. I criticised them as being too searching, because of the demands which they will put upon the court to find out where the truth lies, and following that with the action it is to take.
I am shocked to hear that the permissive society has got so far. If I had anything to do with it I would put it in reverse. But it has got so far that people can say, "Oh, well, it does not matter. If the marriage has finally broken down, what people say in court does not


matter". As someone who has been practising in those courts for over 40 years, I thoroughly disagree with every word of that.
It is difficult enough for a judge, very often, looking into the private lives of two people brought before him, to find out exactly where the truth lies. Perhaps somebody, glib-tongued and slick, can get away with it in the short time, and it is a short time, of the hearing, or before the decree absolute, three months, and may be less where a special order is made. There is not much time to find out about dishonesty. The hands of the court are to that extent tied. It is difficult for the court to be able to say, "You lied to me on a material point and therefore you got your decree nisi by dishonesty".
This cannot be remedied, as the hon. and learned Member for Oldham, West (Mr. Bruce Campbell) said, by prosecution for perjury. In some matters, criminal matters, for instance, the onus of proof is a great deal higher and yet it is a fundamental difficulty for the jury to find out exactly where the truth lies. A judge in a divorce court, with his vast experience of this type of work, can more easily find out, but his task would be made much more difficult if the truth were not requisite.
It is for these reasons that, although I did not intend to do so, I have intervened in this debate, trying to bring the House back to the importance of maintaining the integrity and honesty of those who appear before the courts, whatever courts they may be, but particularly in relation to such personal matters as divorce.

2.45 p.m.

Mr. Abse: I think that there would be no one in this House who would adopt anything but the most critical and severe attitude to anyone who attempted to deceive the court. I am sure that the hon. Member for Kensington, South (Sir B. Rhys Williams), when he made his case, shared that view, and certainly I did not in any way interpret his comments in the way in which, quite clearly, but I think wrongly, the hon. and learned Member for Surrey, East (Mr. Doughty) has.
As I understood the argument which was being advanced by the hon. Member

for Kensington, South, he was being very logical, in the light of his last intervention, in putting this view. He was really suggesting that it seems illogical and unattractive that someone should be punished by remaining married in circumstances in which it would otherwise be permitted for the marriage to be terminated. I would have thought there was certainly no need for the moral strictures of the hon. and learned Member for Surrey, East against the hon. Member for Kensington, South.
I should like to take it a little further. Perhaps the hon. Member for Kensington, South does not fully appreciate this. What the House has to decide, in making this judgment on whether there should or should not be a Clause of this kind relating to deception, is what its possible consequences may be, not only to the deceiver, but to those who are perfectly innocent, to his wife and to his children. It is because of this that I certainly have the greatest doubts about it, whatever may be the desire of people to uphold, as all of us want, the dignity of the court, and to make certain that people, when they come before the court, should not feel that they can behave in a most reckless manner. When the House considers, as it must, what may be the consequences, if we take up this very stringent attitude which is proposed, if deception has taken place—

Mr. Doughty: Did I hear the hon. Member aright? Did he say "stringent attitude" when the only question is whether we tell the truth?

Mr. Abse: I am very sorry, but I did not hear the hon. and learned Member.

Mr. Doughty: Did the hon. Member say it is a stringent attitude when the only question is whether we tell the truth?

Mr. Abse: That was not the stringent attitude. The stringent attitude is, in the terms of the new Clause, in insisting that the court should decide to rescind the decree on the ground that there has been deception on the part of one of the parties, and what I was saying was that in considering that proposition the House must consider the consequences, which might be disastrous. I did not suggest, nor, indeed, I believe, did the hon. Member for Kensington, South, that there should not be a very stringent attitude


to deception. The stringent attitude is in the implementation of the Clause.

Mr. Bruce Campbell: I do not follow the hon. Member about this "disaster". Would he explain what disaster this is? Is the disaster that the respondent will suffer by being divorced against her will?

Mr. Abse: The hon. and learned Member is preoccupied with one aspect of the matter. Let me indicate to him what I have in mind. It could be—could it not?—if some deception had taken place, and the court demonstrably had come to the conclusion that it had, yet despite that grave deception which had been practised, the court could conclude that, out of the interests of the children of the marriage, for example, it should be terminated. Are we prepared to say that because the petitioner has told a lie, or attempted to mislead the court, the innocent should suffer, because of the act of the guilty? That situation has to be faced.
I acknowledge that the courts have a right to feel that the Acts which we put in front of them will protect the courts. The best method has been adopted in this Bill, to prevent lies which do come before the court, which are lies which only too often arise—out of the question of collusion, out of connivance, and lies which arise out of discretion statements. Anyone who knows about the divorce courts knows that deceptions arise because we have these doctrines of collusion and connivance and the infamous discretion statement—

Mr. Wilkins: The hon. Member talks about the punishment of the innocent, but does not he agree that the Bill does this all the way through?

Mr. Abse: If I may seriously pursue the argument without interventions of that kind, I am suggesting that the Bill has taken out of the law the doctrine of collusion and connivance and the need for deceptive discretion statements. We are doing far more than attempting to insert a Clause that could have as a side effect a serious consequence upon the parties and the children to the marriage and cause a marriage to remain in existence although it is contrary to the public interest that it should do so. When this issue came before us last Session many hon. Members—as the right

hon. and learned Member for Chertsey (Sir L. Heald) will know, since he appears to have refreshed himself of the last occasion—including the hon. Member for Chelmsford (Mr. St. John-Stevas), despite his deep religious convictions, after much thought came to the conclusion that to insert a Clause like this would be quite immoral. The House must make a judgment.
When we have taken away as much as we can of the provocation to deception, are we prepared to go further and to say: given the fact that there is a lot of perjury and that people who tell lies before the court can be punished and sent to prison, we will take the risk and insist upon marriages remaining in existence, dead though they may, undesired as they may be by the parties, because somebody has told lies? I hope that if anybody is suggesting that in putting forward this view I am condoning deception or lies, that suggestion will be regarded as far from the truth.
The sponsors of the Bill, by the way in which they have sought to remedy the existing law and take away the provocation to deception, have probably narrowed the area where it is likely to take place. Although there are strong arguments for the new Clause, and I acknowledge, now that collusion, connivance and the discretion statement, where are the main cause of lies by people appearing before the court, have been effectively eliminated by the Bill, on balance I am against the Clause.

Mr. Percival: I rise only to express the hope that we may hear the view of the Government on this before the House comes to a conclusion. I appreciate that the Government may say about parts of the Bill which deal with circumstances in which there should be a decree that this is a matter of opinion on the merits on which the House should itself come to a conclusion.
I hope that I shall have the ear of the Under-Secretary of State for the Home Department. If he has just sent for the Solicitor-General, he need not have done so. My point is one for the Home Office rather than for the Law Officers, which is why I am glad to see the Under-Secretary here.
Consideration of the grounds of divorce is a matter for the opinion of the House,


but the new Clause brings in an element of public policy, that is to say, what effect upon the administration of justice there may be if we fail to punish attempts to deceive the court. I hope that the Minister, with his great Department of State behind him, will not underestimate the importance of this.
It is all very well to be rational and lobical about such matters, but those of us who practise in the law know full well how often it is that when one has succeeded in relieving someone of the danger of a severe punishment that person is apt to say: "It is easy to get away with it, nothing happens". What may be a wholly logical and rational approach may have the result of lessening the respect for justice and thereby render even more difficult the administration of it.
There are alternative ways of dealing with lying to the court. It is quite right, as the hon. Member for Pontypool (Mr. Abse) has said, that there are laws about perjury, and he will not underestimate the difficulties of implementing those laws. First, they apply only where evidence has been given on oath. Secondly, the hon. Member for Pontypool will know the heavy burden there is in establishing the falsehood of what has been said on oath. He will know that it often happens that a judge has a strong suspicion that he has been misled and says that the papers shall be referred to the Director of Public Prosecutions. The Director of Public Prosecutions must look at the matter from a different point of view. He will want to know whether there is sufficient evidence to bring home a charge of perjury in a criminal court.
We must be sure, even although it may in some circumstances cause temporary hardship, that Parliament is making it quite clear that a very serious view is taken of attempts to deceive the courts and that people who attempt to do so may expect, as a result, to suffer hardship. That is all that the new Clause would do. It would not necessarily freeze the situation for ever more to the detriment of everyone concerned. If it were depriving the respondent of a divorce which the respondent wanted, it is difficult to visualise circumstances in which it would not be possible, after the petitioner's decree had been dismissed on this ground, for the respondent

to start new and honest proceedings and to get a decree without any attempt to deceive the court.
I very much doubt whether the new Clause would have the consequences which the hon. Member for Pontypool puts forward, but I do not want to depart from the ground which I stated as my reason for standing up. There is an element of public policy involved here and I hope, before the House comes to a conclusion on this, that we shall have the benefit of the advice of the Under-Secretary of State upon it.

Mr. John Lee: There is a phrase which comes to mind from one's first student days that those who come to equity come with clean hands. Although I practise in the common law and although practice in the common law and at the criminal Bar tends to engender a degree of professional cynicism and one does not expect the white flower of innocence to blossom in either the dock or the witness box so very much, there is an inclination in some quarters to treat the question of deceit of the court a little too lightly. Although I felt that some of the remarks of the hon. and learned Member for Surrey, East (Mr. Doughty) on the subject of the permissive society were a little tendentious and, perhaps, unfortunate, I find myself, at any rate, 90 per cent. in agreement with him.
The fact remains that the courts have a difficult enough task as it is with the legitimate practices of members of the Bar in the promotion of their clients' interests in criminal or civil matters which may be under discussion and in dealing with witnesses who are sometimes stupid or dishonest, or sometimes both. For this sort of provision to be included, however, is nothing unreasonable.
My hon. Friend the Member for Pontypool (Mr. Abse) drew attention to the provisions for perjury. I cannot remember the last occasion when I came across a perjury prosecution. On one occasion years ago, when I was exercising magisterial jurisdiction abroad, in exasperation I attempted to have proceedings for perjury instituted against a particularly impudent, lying witness and I was gently persuaded by my elders and betters, those more experienced than I, of the realities of the situation and to abandon such things as being impracticable.
3.0 p.m.
The new Clause which the right hon. and learned Member for Chertsey (Sir L. Heald) has put forward is not obligatory. It does not automatically disqualify anybody who is so ill-advised as to appear before the courts and tell lies of a substantial character. What it does is to give the judge discretion not to implement the decision. It would be likely to have a beneficial effect in this way. Those solicitors who practise in the divorce courts and who have no illusions about the temptations of people to lie in these matters will be able to say to their clients, if they suspect that something untruthful is afoot, "If you go before the court and tell your story, and it should turn out to be held as a matter of fact that it is untrue, your suit will be at risk and you may suffer the consequences as a result". That does not seem to be an unreasonable thing to do.
The Bill includes paragraph (e) of Clause 2(1), which introduces for the first time, and it has been accepted by the House, the principle of the unilateral repudiation of a marriage, with all that that entails. This is not the right place to discuss the merits of that, but I hope that we shall be able to do so on Third Reading, because the Amendment concerned with it has not been selected.
It does not seem to me to be unreasonable that the courts should be given, added to their not very extensive armoury of powers, a provision that might do something to make people treat a little less lightly the idea that they can tell lies of a substantial character in court, get away with it and benefit by their perjury.

Dame Irene Ward: I support the new Clause moved by my right hon. and learned Friend the Member for Chertsey (Sir L. Heald). I have only two brief observations to make. First, the country as a whole would be extremely surprised to hear that anybody in the House of Commons should oppose a Clause of this kind. It is essential that from this House the country should think—as, indeed, it will—that we uphold the speaking of the truth in the courts and that anything that can be done to strengthen that position is very satisfactory action for the House of Commons to take.
My second point concerns the way in which the hon. Member for Pontypool (Mr. Abse) produced his views on the law of perjury. He seemed to think that because there are on the Statute Book laws which apply to perjury, that puts the whole matter quite right and gives the necessary protection to the courts. Having sat as a magistrate for many years, I have never found that the law of perjury was ever called upon to deal with people who, it was perfectly obvious from where one sat on the magisterial bench, were not telling the truth. Time and time again I have wondered why an action for perjury was not set in motion.
I cannot say whether the law is strong enough or is difficult to implement, as my right hon. and learned Friend seemed to indicate, but I certainly am not prepared to rely on the law of perjury in this instance. I wanted to put this firmly on record because I have not had an opportunity to say that I have never thought that the courts of summary jurisdiction have sufficient protection against witnesses who do not tell the truth when they come before them. I think that my right hon. and learned Friend has done a great service by introducing this new Clause. As I said before, I think that the country would find it difficult to understand why anybody could oppose what is embodied in the new Clause. Therefore, I give it my wholehearted support.

Sir Eric Fletcher: I was not intending to speak in the debate on this new Clause and I must apologise to the House because I have not heard the whole of the argument. However, I think it is important, before we depart from the discussion on the new Clause, that we should have the benefit of hearing the advice of my hon. and learned Friend the Solicitor-General who unfortunately is detained elsewhere for the time being. [An HON. MEMBER: "Where is he?"]
Having heard some of the debate, I must confess that I think that it raises a serious issue. Everyone who has practised in the divorce courts over a number of years, as I have, is bound to recognise that justice is sometimes obscured by distortion of the facts or by non-disclosure of relevant facts. In the divorce jurisdiction there are many cases in which


the courts often have to exercise a discretion and one knows, as a matter—

Mr. Simon Mahon: On a point of order. Is it not alarming that the Government Front Bench, on a most important debate like this where the Government are so heavily committed, should on occasions be empty and on others be occupied by only one Member?

Mr. Speaker: Order, Feelings of alarm are highly emotional but not points of order for Mr. Speaker.

Sir Eric Fletcher: I respectfully agree with your Ruling, Mr. Speaker. I have no doubt that any remarks being addressed to you, in the absence of my hon. and learned Friend the Solicitor-General, will be adequately and faithfully conveyed to him before he has occasion, if he catches your eye, to reply to the debate.
I was saying that I am conscious of the problems which arise in divorce cases when judges of the Probate, Divorce and Admiralty Division of the High Court often have to exercise a difficult discretion without knowing the full facts and sometimes being aware, as they must be, that they have not got the whole truth before them. I think that is inevitable in any cases arising in the divorce jurisdiction.
The new Clause moved by the right hon. and learned Member for Chertsey (Sir L. Heald) raises a distinct matter of principle. The new Clause suggests that in a case in which a petitioner
has attempted to deceive the court, it shall dismiss the petition … if the court is of the opinion that the deception was of such a serious nature that it would be wrong to grant the decree.
I understand that the new Clause seeks to embody the principle that absolute candour in our courts of justice is something of pre-eminent importance and that perjury is a very serious matter. I am bound to say that I agree with that view. Ever since the Commandments were handed down on Mount Sinai, to give false witness against one's neighbour has been regarded as one of the most heinous of sins. I therefore think that we should be remiss if we did not recognise in this Clause the great seriousness of bearing false witness against one's neighbour and of giving on oath in court any kind of evidence which is perjured.
I agree with what has been said, that it is noteworthy that for a great many years there have not been many prosecutions for perjury, but I am conscious of the fact, as I am sure others are, that the value of the oath and the importance of it are declining, and that it is losing its significance. This is largely because there have not been any prosecutions for perjury. The absence of such prosecutions is making people indifferent to, or regardless of, the necessity not merely of telling the truth, which is bad enough, but, what is much worse, of not telling falsehoods on oath.
Unfortunately this stain on our society derives from the fact that many members of the population no longer have much regard for the sanctity of the oath. This is because they no longer fear the consequences of perjuring themselves, consequences which in previous years were regarded as very serious indeed. I have often been troubled about what should be done when hearing people in the witness box almost callously take the oath, perhaps not even having regard to the deity and not thinking that there is anything particularly relevant or distinguishable between giving evidence on oath and making statements that are not protected by the sanctity of an oath.
In so far as that is so, it makes the task of those who are concerned with the administration of justice, particularly the judges, much more difficult, and I think that it is the duty of this House to place on record our view that for any litigant, or petitioner, or witness, whether in divorce proceedings or in any other, to attempt by giving false evidence to deceive the court is to do something which we regard as very serious indeed.
I think that it would undermine the whole administration of justice if the idea got abroad that people could be reckless in making statements in the witness box, and if they felt that the risk of prosecution for perjury was so remote that it did not matter. It would make it almost impossible for the judges to administer justice and to ascertain the facts and to decide who was right and who was wrong if there were a contest. But what is even more serious is that in undefended cases which come before the divorce courts on uncontradicted evidence there is a paramount duty on


those who apply to the court for relief in matrimonial matters to be absolutely candid in the facts which, as the law states, they are required to place before the courts.
Therefore, while, as my hon. Friend has said, this Clause is not compulsive on the court but will entitle the court to exercise its discretion, it would be salutary to write into the Bill a Clause of this kind, and I hope that it will be accepted by my hon. and learned Friend.

3.15 p.m.

Mr. Alexander W. Lyon: I followed closely the logic of my right hon. Friend the Member for Islington, East (Sir Eric Fletcher) and I see the significance of what he said about the value of speaking the truth in any judicial proceedings, but it is an unfortunate flaw in his argument that in civil and criminal proceedings the courts do not have the additional provision requested by this Clause and which is virtually the same power as the divorce courts have at the moment.
The question is whether the divorce courts require any power in addition to the law of perjury which is not available to the civil and criminal courts. I suggest that there is need for that additional power for the very reason that divorce proceedings are completely different from civil and criminal proceedings. Civil proceedings are clearly a combat between two contestants, each of whom has to produce his evidence. If he does not, he fails. It is no use saying that, in that kind of situation, one is trying to get at the truth. This may be the theory but the practice is that one is looking for the stronger case and one deals with it on that basis. In that kind of situation, the law of perjury, despite the necessity for having corroboration by a separate witness, is adequate. In criminal cases there is a difference in that, although there are two combatants, there is an overriding public interest. Nevertheless, the same argument applies there as well.
However, in divorce proceedings there is no combat between two contestants. It may look like that to the disinterested layman but, in fact, society, through the judge, is deciding whether it is in the interests of society as well as of the parties that a marriage should be broken up. It is this intervention of the general

social interest of the public which is a hangover from the old ecclestiastical jurisdiction which makes divorce proceedings very much more like continental proceedings, whereby the court is not simply an arbiter between two contestants but a sort of interlocutory judge seeking the truth.
If the Bill is to proceed, it is vital that that principle should be not only maintained but underlined. The essence of the Bill is that divorce will be allowed when and only if there is an irretrievable breakdown of the marriage. Society says that, in every other case, it is essential to preserve the marriage but that it is not essential where the relationship is broken so much that there is no point in going on with the marriage.
In that kind of situation, it is essential that the judge should have every atom of information available to make his decision and, in addition, that he should be able to know that the information is true. It is surely, therefore, necessary to put upon the contestants an obligation to speak the truth over and above their general liability in respect of perjury. It is rather like a contract of insurance, where the law implies an undertaking that, whenever one applies for a contract of insurance, there is a burden on one to disclose all one knows because it is essential that the insurer should be able to make a valid judgment about the risks involved.

Mr. Peter Mahon: Surely, in the case of an insurance, if the holder does not pay the premium, he does not get the protection of the policy. Is it too much to ask that a person who does not tell the truth in the divorce court should not get the protection of the court in the same sense as a person who tells the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth?

Mr. Lyon: I am not attracted by an argument in relation to divorce which talks about punishment for offenders. It is desirable to get away from the concept of matrimonial offence and of any punishment for wrong doing. What I am saying is that the divorce court jurisdiction is essentially society's judgement upon a marriage and not simply the view of the two parties to the marriage about whether it should continue. It is right, therefore, that the court should have completely truthful information to enable


it to make a valid judgment, so the new Clause, or something like it, should be passed and it is regrettable that it was dropped from the original Bill.

Mr. Wilkins: I do not know whether this occurred before your occupation of the Chair, Mr. Speaker, but a number of requests were made for the opinion of the Solicitor-General on the points raised in the new Clause. I believe that a search party was sent out for him, which eventually found him. Could we now have the benefit of his advice?

Mr. Speaker: That is an illuminating narrative of what happened, but whether the hon. and learned Gentleman intervenes is a matter for him.

The Solicitor-General: This new Clause raises the question of the desirability of a reserve power in the court to refuse a decree where there has been deception. I have taken the view, since I first started considering this point, that it is rather a narrowly balanced one. I believe in telling the House or a Committee when I find an argument fairly narrowly balanced, and this is one.
The argument which prevailed with the Committee on this point was that deception was not, or need not be, germane to the issue of irretrievable breakdown, the concept introduced in the Bill. Indeed, if there has been deception to try to get a decree, that circumstance points rather in the direction of irretrievable breakdown than in any other direction, I should have thought. It was the logic of that view which I think impressed the Committee, and it impresses me.
It is true that, on an earlier occasion last Session, I recommended the retention of this reserve power to the Committee, but we should bear in mind that I did so in a rather special context. The House had given its approval to the principle of irretrievable breakdown in giving the Bill a Second Reading in that Session, as it has done to this Bill in this Session, but presentational factors, it seemed to me at that time, rightly or wrongly, were of great importance. To carry public opinion with a Bill of this kind, I thought it would be desirable to provide for this reserve power. That was my earlier view.
The position now is rather different. The logic which follows from applying the concept of irretrievable breakdown as the sole ground for allowing a dissolution of marriage is to my mind rather in favour of resisting the new Clause. If the sponsors of the Bill thought it appropriate to recommend that course, I am inclined to think that they would be right.

Sir L. Heald: Is it not a fact that when the former Bill was before the Committee the Solicitor-General recommended acceptance of the Clause? He has not been present during the discussion on this occasion. Is not that right?

Sir Eric Fletcher: Am I correct in understanding my hon. and learned Friend to say that deception of the court is likely to be an indication of the irretrievable breakdown of a marriage? If so, that seems an intolerable proposition.

The Solicitor-General: May I say in answer to the right hon. and learned Member for Chertsey (Sir L. Heald). that I have listened carefully on more than one occasion to the arguments on this matter. I heard the beginning of the debate on this new Clause. I left the Chamber shortly after two o'clock, having spent the rest of the day in attendance here. I assure the right hon. and learned Gentleman that I believe that I am well acquainted with the arguments which can be adduced on this issue.
I ask my right hon. Friend the Member for Islington, East (Sir Eric Fletcher) to consider that there is force in my proposition. If the stage has been reached in a marriage at which spouses go before the court and tell deliberate untruths to achieve a decree, that is, prima facie, good evidence that there has been an irretrievable breakdown of the marriage.

Several Hon. Members: Several Hon. Members rose—

Mr. Speaker: Order. We cannot have too many interventions. I think, however, that the hon. and learned Member for Southport (Mr. Percival) had been seeking to intervene.

Mr. Ian Percival: I had the good fortune to catch your predecessor's eye, Mr. Speaker—

Mr. Speaker: Order. The hon. and learned Gentleman cannot make another speech. He has exhausted his right to do so. However, I noticed that he several times tried to intervene in the Solicitor-General's speech. He may put a question, but that is all.

Mr. Percival: I am obliged, Mr. Speaker. I was about to explain that that was what I wished to do.
Before the Solicitor-General sits down, will he enlarge on the point that he made? It is a curious argument that lies are likely to be evidence of irretrievable breakdown. There is a definition of "irretrievable breakdown" in Clause 2. If the conditions there set out are satisfied there will be no need for anybody to lie. If people lie or attempt to deceive, it will be, ex hypothesi, because they do not have grounds for divorce as defined by the Bill. In the light of that, would the right hon. and learned Gentleman reconsider his view?

3.30 p.m.

Sir Cyril Black: I find it difficult to understand the arguments of the opponents of this new Clause, who have sought to persuade the House that the present law of perjury is adequate to deal with the evil with which the Clause deals, namely that of a party who attempts to decieve the courts.
As I as a layman understand the matter, one of the main arguments advanced by the promoters and supporters of this Bill for the very radical change in the law which it seeks to make is that, as the law stands at the moment, a great many divorces are obtained in conditions involving what I have heard variously described as sham, deceit, hypocrisy, lying and collusion on the part of witnesses. This being so, it is important to change the state of affairs which it is alleged arises from the present law and to substitute for it a law under which these conditions are much less likely to arise.
If we are prepared to accept as correct all that has been said about the alleged amount of deceit and untruthfulness on the part of witnesses in the divorce courts under the present law—a deceit which, on their own view of the matter, the law of perjury has done practically nothing whatever to curb, a state of affairs which,

in their view, has continued for many years past and in which, so far as I am aware, there has not been one single case of perjury brought as a result of this appalling state of affairs—yet when my right hon. and learned Friend brings forward a very modest and reasonable Clause which is designed to deal with this evil of untruthful evidence in the courts, we are seriously told that the state of affairs against which my right hon. and learned Friend wants to legislate is better left to the law of perjury because that law is adequate to deal with the matter. That is one of the most inconsistent and ridiculous arguments to which I have listened.
The point has been made that this new Clause would be a punishment upon a witness exercising deceit before a court of law. In one sense that is true. But the point has not been made that the value of the new Clause, if written into the Bill, surely lies much more in what the new Clause would prevent rather than any punishment which it would impose upon those who offend against it.
What the promoters of the new Clause are concerned with, as I understand it, is not primarily the punishment of liars in the courts, but very much more than that. They propose to write into the Bill what may be an effective deterrent in stopping people going into the courts and telling lies. I suggest that the main value of the new Clause, which I support, is in its deterrent value rather than any question of punishment which would be imposed on those who offend against it.
It has been said that the implementation of this Clause might do grave injustice to innocent parties involved in proceedings in the court. That is not the case, because all that the Clause would do would be to give certain powers to the courts to deal with the offence of lying in a particular way. This would be a discretion that could be exercised by the court. It would not be obligatory on the court to exercise that discretion in any particular way. In circumstances where the court felt that the balance of advantage lay on the side of not imposing the penalty on the person who sought to deceive the court, the court would presumably exercise its discretion in such a way as to do good to the largest


number of people over the widest possible area.
A point that has so far not been made is that even if the court were to intervene and dismiss the petition on account of the deceit of one of the parties, that would not be the end of the matter for all time. After the person who had deceived the court had suffered the penalty of the proceedings being dismissed because of that deceit, as I understand the law there would be nothing to prevent that party initiating new proceedings and coming before the court again in a spirit of frankness and truthfulness, and with clean hands. The case could then be considered again on its merits in the light of the truthful evidence tendered then as against the untruthful evidence tendered on the previous occasion.
I ask the House to consider the effect on public opinion if the new Clause were to be rejected. I know the careful arguments that have been addressed to us today on the question of condoning untruthfulness. It has been said by those who oppose the new Clause that they are just as much opposed to deceit and untruthfulness in the courts as are we who support it—

Mr. Alexander W. Lyon: I do not think that the hon. Gentleman has got the full purport of the Solicitor-General's intervention. As I understand him, my hon and learned Friend is not opposed to deceit. He wishes to create a new ground of divorce in addition to the other five. It is that if one cannot prove one of the five grounds one deceives the court, and is entitled to have the marriage dissolved, in any case.

Sir C. Black: I am obliged to the hon. Gentleman for his entervention. I was not referring particularly to the speech of the learned Solicitor-General but rather to those of other hon. Members. Many of those opposing the new Clause have adopted the attitude, "We are as much opposed to deceit and untruthfulness in the courts as are those who support the new Clause, but we think that there are good reasons why the new Clause should not be added to the Bill".
I have no intention or wish in any way to question the sincerity of their views. I do not for one moment believe that

any hon. Member would condone or take a light view of a witness in a court of law being deceitful or untruthful. But these niceties of argument are not understood by the public at large. What will be understood by the public at large if the new Clause is rejected is that there were those here who were desirous of adding to the Bill a safeguard to discourage deceit and untruthfulness in the divorce courts, but that a majority of hon. Members were not willing to have that safeguard added. The inevitable conclusion will be, however erroneous it may be, that a majority of hon. Members take a somewhat light and lenient view of the enormity of the offence of deceit and untruthfulness in the courts.

Sir Eric Fletcher: Would the hon. Member be good enough to address himself to the argument of the Solicitor-General, which as I understood it was that the more one deceives the court the more one can prove the irretrievable breakdown of a marriage and therefore one could have a divorce?

Sir C. Black: My difficulty about responding to that request is that I found myself unable to follow the logic and the reasoning of the Solicitor-General. Therefore, I have not sought to reply to what he said because I did not follow fully the reasoning of the short speech he made.

The Solicitor-General: The hon. Member for Wimbledon (Sir C. Black) has been invited to deal with an argument of mine. I am sure he would prefer if he is to deal with an argument of mine that he should deal with it on a full and accurate understanding of what the argument is. I put this to him. Suppose that in a particular marriage there has been in fact an irretrievable breakdown. Does he think that in that situation a court should have discretion to refuse a decree because there has been a deception?

Sir C. Black: Yes I do think so, bearing particularly in mind that a dismissal of the case is not the final dismissal of the case. It is merely delaying a relief which a party is seeking to obtain because that party has come into court in a spirit of deceit and untruthfulness. Bearing in mind, as must be borne in mind, that after an interval the party can come back


after he has, as it were, purged his contempt and start again, it is right in the interests of truthfulness in the court that he should suffer the disadvantages and delay of his first petition being dismissed.
The effect on public opinion of a decision against this new Clause would be deplorable and would not serve the interests which I am sure all hon. Members have at heart.

Mr. Hugh Delargy: I have been greatly astonished by much that I have heard in the last hour or two. I am not quite so charitably-minded as the hon. Member for Wimbledon (Sir C. Black) who absolved from any guilt everyone who has spoken against this Clause. I am astonished that any hon. Member should oppose the principle that people should tell the truth and that any hon. Member should go on record as voting against the principle of telling the truth. I am greatly astonished that hon. Members think that persons should be protected and rewarded for telling lies, and for telling lies on oath, which is what opposition to this Clause means.
I am sure that I must have misunderstood the Solicitor-General three times over. He cannot possibly mean what I believed three times he meant. He said that deception in court points to the irretrievable breakdown of a marriage. I thought that the court was set up to examine this contention. My hon. and learned Friend, it seems, is establishing a new ground for divorce—that of telling lies in court.

Mr. R. Gresham Cooke: Mr. R. Gresham Cooke (Twickenham) rose—

Mr. Abse: Mr. Abse rose—

Mr. Speaker: The hon. Member for Thurrock (Mr. Delargy) must decide to which of the two hon. Gentlemen he is giving way.

Mr. Delargy: I do not mind which.

3.45 p.m.

Mr. Abse: Will not my hon. Friend acknowledge that if a man goes into court—this is the point which the Solicitor-General was making—and takes the grave risk of committing perjury because he desperately wants a divorce, and shows that he is prepared even to behave criminally because he is so cer

tain that his marriage has ended, that establishes to an even greater extent that it is unlikely that the marriage can ever be healed and that it has irretrievably broken down?

Mr. Delargy: I am glad that my hon. Friend spoke for the Solicitor-General, though I am sure that my hon. and learned Friend the Solicitor-General would not be quite so absurd as that. I as a simple layman believe that people go to court to establish whether there are grounds for divorce. Grounds for divorce are not provided before the divorce judge. The argument apparently is that a man who commits a criminal offence in a divorce court can have a divorce immediately. If so, why is the Bill needed? All that someone need do is to file a petition for divorce and go to court and tell a pack of lies, because in the words of the Solicitor-General that establishes grounds for divorce. I am bewildered and shocked.

Mr. Alexander W. Lyon: Is not this argument diametrically opposed to the attitude of the Law Commission to the proposal of the Archbishop's Commission that the breakdown of a marriage should be the one and only ground for divorce? The Law Commission said that that was unworkable in court; and, therefore., we have to have five tests. What, as I understand it, the sponsors and the Solicitor-General seek to do is to add to the five tests a sixth test—namely, that if somebody is prepared to tell lies that shows that the marriage has broken down too.

Mr. Delargy: I am grateful to my hon. Friend. He has taken the words right out of my mouth. That is precisely what I wanted to say. I am glad that my hon. Friend said it. I emphasise it and agree with him. I hope that the whole House will agree with him.

Mr. J. E. B. Hill: I have never supported the idea that on these important matters of social legislation the Government should be neutral, but the Solicitor-General has adopted that attitude. It appears that he has changed his opinion during the passage of this Bill.

The Solicitor-General: Not during the passage of this Bill. The different attitude which I expressed earlier, and which


I freely acknowledge that I expressed, was in connection with last Session's Bill.

Mr. Hill: I apologise to the hon. and learned Gentleman. I understood him to say that the House having accepted the doctrine of irretrievable breakdown, that alters his decision that some additional safeguard for the courts was desirable. That is an astonishing doctrine, as so many hon. Members have said. One thing which has impressed me about nearly all the recent speakers is that they have mostly been practising lawyers and, therefore, familiar with court procedure in a way in which those of us who are not practising lawyers would not currently be familiar. Therefore, the earliest arguments against the Clause advanced by the sponsors, namely, that some lawyers contend that it would be redundant, fall.
Though the Clause may be redundant for a lawyer, it would be a salutary warning for potential petitioners. The only other point made by the sponsors was the suggestion by the hon. Member for Pontypool (Mr. Abse) that for a petitioner to lose his decree because of deception or attempted deception might inflict hardship on others, namely, children. This is a specious argument because, although that might be the result, it is far more likely to be the result precisely the other way round. In view of the notorious Clause 2(1)(e), a petition can be presented against an unwilling and innocent spouse who herself—it is almost certainly a wife, though it need not be—may well have children. For a divorce to be achieved by deception, that result is both more likely, in my view, and, of course, much more to be disapproved.
Therefore, it seems to me that the sponsors have made no case against accepting this new Clause, and this is what is worrying me, because apparently it had been recommended by the Law Commission, should the divorce law be reformed, and the Law Commission, I do not think, has resiled from that position at all. Therefore, we are in the astonishing position that, with practising lawyers supporting it, distinguished Members on both sides of the House, the sponsors making no case against it, the Government being neutral, having changed their

position, we are apparently to be—not refuted by any argument—left in the hope that, if a Division on the Clause be called, numbers will be sufficient to carry it through.
There has been very great confusion and alarm as to what exactly the Solicitor-General said in his first intervention.

Mr. Peter Mahon: Will the hon. Gentleman not agree that it would be a singular sort of madness for a person who had a bona fide case, an irrefutable case, for divorce, to go into court and deliberately tell untruths?

Mr. Hill: This is so. I take the point, which has been made earlier, that many petitioners go into court in the urgent desire of procuring divorce by hook or by crook, if they can get away with it.
But the Solicitor-General, as I understood him, said, in effect, that one way of showing that a marriage has irretrievably broken down is to lie to the court, and my impression has been confirmed by many subsequent speakers. Although the Solicitor-General said that his change of view was based on the thesis, as I understand it, that if the fact of an irretrievable breakdown is established then it does not matter whether the petitioner has attempted to deceive the court, I think the Solicitor-General, to some extent, was begging his own question, because if we have deception mixed up in a case then the apparent proving of the facts may itself result from the use of deception.
It is important that the House should consider the record of what the Solicitor-General said. There are only seven minutes to go. Earlier in the day an attempt was made to close debate. It is quite clear that the debate on this Bill will continue—I hope in Private Members' time. I also very much hope that no decision on this Clause will be taken till we have had the chance of considering what the Solicitor-General said, because that statement, as it stands on the record, will cause a great deal of public disquiet. My hon. Friend the Member for Wimbledon (Sir C. Black) has already pointed out the severe criticism, almost incredulity, which will follow if it appears that the House of


Commons has rejected an attempt to require petitioners to—and an attempt to warn petitioners that they must—go into court and make a clean breast of their side of the story and not withhold any material evidence. This is a matter which goes wider than a case for divorce.
The ultimate safeguard against perjury is scarcely relevant to some ways in which the court may be effectively deceived. There may be reckless or negligent conduct by a petitioner in allowing incorrect evidence to go through, although perhaps not through his own lips, and there are in the Bill certain time qualifications—six months plus or minus—which may offer scope for deception. It is quite clear that the Bill will enlarge the possibilities of deception if petitioners are so minded. The sponsors are still objecting to the Clause, and what worries me is that I can only suppose that they wish to see the divorce law made virtually so permissive that it will amount to little more than a formality.
In certain cases I could accept the doctrine of irretrievable breakdown, but I am unhappy about the unilateral Clause and could think in terms of accepting it only if the Bill contained every possible safeguard. Deliberately to reject a proposed safeguard which the Law Commission wanted and which the Solicitor-General in an earlier consideration of the Bill wanted is absolutely wrong.
May I conclude by referring to what was said by the hon. Member for York (Mr. Alexander W. Lyon) on whether a third interest in divorce is a public policy. This is an interest which requires to be and which should be supported by the new Clause. I ask the Solicitor-General to reconsider the alarming statements which he made. It is a strange doctrine to emanate from anyone in this House, and it is doubly strange that it should emanate from a Law Officer of the Crown speaking not in a personal capacity but for a neutral Government. The Government cannot have a neutral policy on lying. They cannot say at one stage in a long debate on a great subject that it is wrong to seek to deceive a court and then, after a certain decision by the House, change their view.

The Solicitor-General: The hon. Gentleman has got it quite wrong. Of course it is always wrong to lie to the court, and nobody has suggested to the contrary.

Mr. Hill: But the Solicitor-General is resisting an attempt to emphasise this principle in a Bill which many people will think permissive, and nothing can alter that. I hope that the House will insist on reviewing the record before coming to a decision on this.

Mr. Alldritt: I hesitate to intervene, but this is a highly dangerous doctrine. Like many right hon. and hon. Members, I, too, serve on the bench, and I think that we can give the lie to this doctrine of what happens in the courts. We know quite often that we are being lied to and being deceived, but there is little we can do about it unless the matter concerns earnings when an earnings certificate may be applied for. We may be told that the marriage has broken down and that it is irretrievable, and in the end we probably make a matrimonial order on the evidence which is before us, but it would be interesting to examine what happens after that order has been made. As a result of our probation service, marriage guidance counsellors and marriage guidance bureaux, I guess—although I do not know the actual figure—that reconciliations take place in about 20 per cent. of the cases—

Mr. Speaker: Order. The hon. Gentleman must come to the Amendment, even in the short time he has left.

Mr. Alldritt: At least 20 per cent.—

It being Four o'clock, the debate stood adjourned.

Debate to be resumed upon Monday next.

INDUSTRIAL INFORMATION BILL

Order read for resuming adjourned debate on Second Reading [13th December].

Hon. Members: Object.

Debate further adjourned till Friday next.

CUSTOMARY HOLIDAYS BILL

Order for Second Reading read.

Hon. Members: Object.

Second Reading deferred till Friday next.

EXPORT OF MANUSCRIPTS BILL

Order for Second Reading read.

Hon. Members: Object.

Second Reading deferred till Friday, 16th May.

HOUSING (LOCAL AUTHORITY CONTRIBUTIONS) BILL

Order for Second Reading read.

Hon. Members: Object.

Second Reading deferred till Friday next.

PARLIAMENT (No. 4) BILL

Order read for resuming adjourned debate on Second Reading [18th April].

Hon. Members: Object.

Debate further adjourned till Friday next.

HOUSE OF COMMONS REDISTRIBUTION OF SEATS (AMENDMENT) BILL

Order read for resuming adjourned debate on Second Reading [21st March].

Hon. Members: Object.

Debate further adjourned till Friday next.

BRITISH STANDARD TIME ACT (REPEAL) BILL

Order for Second Reading read.

Hon. Members: Object.

Second Reading deferred till Friday, 9th May.

AGE LEVEL OF EMPLOYMENT BILL

Order for Second Reading read.

Hon. Members: Object.

Second Reading deferred till Friday next.

FEUDAL REFORM (SCOTLAND) BILL

Order for Second Reading read.

Hon. Members: Object.

Second Reading deferred till Friday next.

PERIODICAL PUBLICATIONS (PROTECTION OF SUBSCRIBERS) BILL

Order for Second Reading read.

Hon. Members: Object.

Second Reading deferred till Friday next.

PROTECTION FROM DOGS BILL

Order for Second Reading read.

Hon. Members: Object.

Second Reading deferred till Friday next.

EXPANSION OF NEW TOWNS (REFERENDUM) BILL

Order for Second Reading read.

Hon. Members: Object.

Second Reading deferred till Friday next.

WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION AND BENEFIT (AMENDMENT) BILL

Order for Second Reading read.

Hon. Members: Object.

Second Reading deferred till Friday next.

NATIONAL INSURANCE (INDUSTRIAL INJURIES) (AMENDMENT) BILL

Order for Second Reading read.

Hon. Members: Object.

Second Reading deferred till Friday next.

BORDERS DEVELOPMENT (SCOTLAND) BILL

Order for Second Reading read.

Hon. Members: Object.

Second Reading deferred till Friday next.

RENT ACT 1968 (AMENDMENT) BILL

Order for Second Reading read.

Hon. Members: Object.

Second Reading deferred till Friday next.

LIVE HARE COURSING (ABOLITION) BILL

Order for Second Reading read.

Hon. Members: Object.

Second Reading deferred till Friday, 9th May.

HIGHWAYS (STRAYING ANIMALS) (No. 2) BILL

Order for Second Reading read.

Hon. Members: Object.

Second Reading deferred till Friday next.

ORGAN TRANSPLANTS BILL

Order for Second Reading read.

Hon. Members: Object.

Second Reading deferred till Friday next.

CRUELTY TO ANIMALS ACT 1876 (AMENDMENT) BILL

Order for Second Reading read.

Hon. Members: Object.

Second Reading deferred till Friday next.

ROAD TRAFFIC (INSURANCE) BILL

Order for Second Reading read.

Hon. Members: Object.

Second Reading deferred till Friday next.

OBSCENE PUBLICATIONS (AMENDMENT) BILL

Order for Second Reading read.

Hon. Members: Object.

Second Reading deferred till Friday next.

NATIONAL MOD (SCOTLAND) BILL

Bill read a Second time.

Bill committed to a Standing Committee pursuant to Standing Order No. 40 (Commital of Bills).

OPENCAST MINING (NORTH WARWICKSHIRE)

Motion made, and Question proposed, That this House do now adjourn.—[Mr. Ernest G. Perry.]

4.3 p.m.

Mr. Keith Speed: I am glad to raise in Parliament a problem which is causing great concern to many thousands of my constituents. On 6th March, the Opencast Executive of the National Coal Board submitted an application to opencast coal on the Anker site in North Warwickshire under the Opencast Coal Act, 1958. My constituents had until 8th April to make objections to the Minister and, objections having been made. I presume that a public inquiry is to be held. I realise that this will inhibit the Minister in replying in detail, but I felt that it would be useful to find out from his Department its approach to opencast mining in general. Any views that can be given to reassure my constituents will be more than welcome.
It might be helpful if I outline briefly the history of the district in connection with opencast mining, because the Poles-worth and Dordon urban area, in North Warwickshire, has had 20 years of opencast mining. Those operations were concluded only a few years ago. The people in the area had to put up with much inconvenience, upset, dirt and noise over the whole of the 20 years.
Three years ago the Opencast Executive announced proposals, of which the


present Anker application was to be the first phase, for a massive scheme to win 15 million tons of opencast coal over a huge area ranging from Shuttington right across through to Watling Street. It has never said that these plans have been cancelled. If this application had gone ahead there would have been the most appalling effect on the whole of North Warwickshire. The plans have been shelved, but not cancelled.
In the past few years the North-East Warwickshire Water Board has been studying the area for a new reservoir site. As a result of this, discussions took place with the Opencast Executive for a combined operation whereby the Opencast Executive would extract the coal and the resultant hole would form the reservoir, thus allegedly saving the North-East Warwickshire Water Board money.
I am not competent to judge how serious is the water situation in North-East Warwickshire. Certainly water is an essential raw material for industry and if we want new industry in the area we will need more water. Originally it was stated that the reservoir was essential by 1972, but this date has now been pushed back two years.
I do not know whether Shuttington is the best site. On the economics of the digging of the site, I have seen no evidence that the excavation of the reservoir has even been put out to open tender. If we assume—and these are big assumptions—that the reservoir is urgent and the site is the best one, selling the coal from the hole that has to be dug for the reservoir will save lots of public money. As I say, these are big assumptions.
We then run up against the fact that the amount of coal to be extracted purely for the reservoir is no more than 500,000 or 600,000 tons. Yet the present application which has been put in is to extract 1,600,000 tons—in other words, three times as much, and the workings will cover an area of 838 acres.
It might be useful to look at the national position so far as opencast working is concerned. I understand, from a reply that the Minister gave to the hon. Member for Derbyshire, North-East (Mr. Swain) last December, that to stockpile

coal, whether opencast or deep-mined, costs, roughly speaking, £1 a ton.
The Minister told me on 27th March that at present 3.9 million tons of opencast coal is stockpiled nationally. This represents 59 per cent. of the total annual production, compared with a figure of only 14 per cent. of total annual production of deep-mined coal which is stockpiled. This, a very much greater amount of opencast coal is stockpiled than of deep-mined coal.
Because of the effects on deep-mined coal, and no doubt bearing all these facts in mind, the Government, in the Fuel White Paper of 1967, said:
Though opencast production is profitable and relatively small, there is no advantage to be gained from continuing it where this can be avoided, at a time when surplus coal is being put to stock at considerable cost. The Government have therefore decided not to give further authorisations for opencast production except in special cases where, because of quality or location, the coal to be produced is not in competition with coal from deep mines; and they have asked the National Coal Board to have regard to these factors in operations at existing sites.
I completely agree with that statement in the White Paper and I hope that the Minister can confirm that that particular statement is still the policy of the Government.
The Minister also told me on 27th March that, since the White Paper, 13 applications for open-cast mining all over the country have been received, including the particular application at Anker. Of these 13, five had been granted for anthracite or for coking coal. We all know that there is a great shortage of anthracite and coking coal, and no doubt these factors persuaded the Minister to approve the applications.
As a matter of interest, according to the National Coal Board's 1968 Report, the difference in cost between opencast and deep-mined coal is, roughly speaking, 10s. a ton in favour of opencast coal. The Anker coal is ordinary industrial coal, which does not fall within the category of coking coal or anthracite. It would appear, on national economic grounds, that there is, little point in this particular project being approved.
What is the effect on local mines? There were 12 deep mines in Warwickshire a few years ago. Now there are five, three of which are in my constituency: Birch Coppice, Daw Mill and Baddesley.


These are all highly productive and profitable pits. Birch Coppice has responded well to the challenge, and has just worked itself off the jeopardy list. I recently visited Daw Mill and Baddesley, and in my discussions with the men both above and below ground I found that they were concerned and worried about their future because of this application.
Confidence is a precious thing. Industrial relations, particularly in the South Midlands area, are excellent, but people in the local pits are now worried, and I share their concern. At the moment 1¾ million tons of industrial coal of a similar type to that to be extracted at Anker are stockpiled in Warwickshire. This is a problem of marketing, and the addition of 1½ million tons to the present 1¾ million tons can only make the problem very much worse, so I share the miners' concern about their future and the future of their truncated industry in this area.
Then there is the effect on amenities. There is the problem of the actual working of the opencast and the stockpile. The area has had 20 years of this problem already. The application envisages operations from 7 o'clock in the morning until 10 o'clock at night, and essential servicing and maintenance being carried out on Sundays. In recent years the district has developed rapidly as an overspill area for Birmingham. Hundreds of houses are being built, and young people are buying their own houses because they cannot afford houses in the great conurbation of Birmingham. In the area where opencast mining is to take place many workings will be close to some of these new estates, and I have clear evidence from local agents that properties are difficult to sell as property values have been adversely affected by the threat of opencast mining. It seems that if the present application goes ahead thousands of householders in the area will be subjected to dirt, noise, and misery for perhaps five to 10 years.
The objectors to the present scheme are numerous, responsible, and substantial. They include the Warwickshire County Council, the Staffordshire County Council, Atherstone Rural District Council, Tamworth Borough Council, various parish councils and residents' associations, the National Union of Mineworkers, the N.F.U., and Meriden con

stituency Conservative and Labour Parties. This is a pretty broad field of opposition to this application.
I am against any fresh opencast operations in the area. If a reservoir is necessary, if this is the best and indeed the only site that it is suitable to mine, I should be prepared, as a compromise, to allow opencast working for the reservoir only, in other words, 500,000 to 600,000 tons, rather than a scheme for 1½ million tons.
I hope that after the public inquiry the Minister will make it clear that any extension over this figure of 500,000 to 600,000 tons, and any fresh applications in the future for larger schemes, are just not on. My constituents have been living with this uncertainty hanging over them for a long time, and now that matters have come to a head I hope that we can dispel the uncertainty and doubt that is hanging over the whole of North Warwickshire.
Serious and responsible allegations that the scheme is a fait accompli and that the public inquiry will be a pretence have been repeated by a member of the North-East Warwickshire Water Board. It is said that a contract has been signed for the N.C.B. to hand over to the North-East Warwickshire Water Board on 1st June, 1974, a site for the reservoir. I hope that this afternoon the Minister will categorically deny those allegations, and confirm that the matter will be judged completely on its merits, because I am sure that all the arguments are on the side of the objectors.
There is much talk about participation and local democracy, but actions always speak louder than words. Stansted showed what could be done, and I assure the Minister that feelings in North Warwickshire are just as strong, just as sincere, and, I believe, just as well founded. I hope and pray that these views will be recognised and upheld when the Minister makes his decision after the inquiry, because it is my sincere belief that if the present scheme goes ahead it will be a major tragedy for the area and will undermine my constituents' belief in democracy.

4.15 p.m.

Mr. Leslie Huckfield: I, too, am grateful for the opportunity to raise this subject and I agree with everything said by the hon. Member for


Meriden (Mr. Speed). I speak on behalf of the miners of Warwickshire, although my constituency is not directly affected. I was, however, to a large extent concerned with the Shuttington, Dondon and Poleworth areas in the interregnum before the hon. Gentleman came to the House.
We are talking about something decribed in the Sunday Press less than two years ago as the richest opencast find in Europe. So far, we have had no statement from the National Coal Board that it has abandoned or modified its long-term objective of making use of that find. It is also a situation in which many miners are coming to a crisis of confidence. They have seen collieries closed, natural gas coming into the area, the Lurgi plant closed at Kingsbury and the oil terminal at Kingsbury, together with the uncertain future of the coal-fired plant.
Many of my contituents are miners and I am sure that, to my constituents, opencast working in North Warwickshire would be the last straw. It is vital, therefore, that something should be done immediately to restore some kind of confidence to the miners of North Warwickshire. I do not want to deal with all the points which the hon. Gentleman raised about the effects on amenity in his constituency, except to say that I agree absolutely. The eastern side of Birmingham which he and I represent is fast becoming a growing commuter area. People have moved into the area because it is a desirable and cheaper place in which to live, and I hope that it will continue to be so. But this kind of thing could be threatened by opencast mining in North Warwickshire.
The hon. Gentleman quoted from the Government White Paper on Fuel Policy. A Parliamentary reply by my right hon. Friend the Minister of Power in March used the same words as those which the hon. Gentleman quoted, except that there was something tagged on to the end. My right hon. Friend added:
These are the fuel policy considerations which will guide the decision on new sites, though from time to time there may be factors outside fuel policy which favour opencast working and will need to be taken into account."—[OFFICIAL REPORT, 21st March, 1968; Vol. 780, c. 217.]

I realise that my hon. Friend the Parliamentary Secretary is in a rather difficult position about this application. The whole matter is sub judice and to ask him to give any kind of decision today is out of the question. But the hon. Gentleman and I are entitled to some indication of what modification may have taken place in the Government's thinking about opencast mining. I know from Questions which I have put to Ministers about opencast mining and the Government's attitude that the qualifications are becoming rather more definite every time. We have arrived at the stage at which there are factors other than fuel policy considerations, and I want to know what they are.
The hon. Gentleman and I realise that, in North Warwickshire, more water is needed. We need more industry there and that industry will need more water. Like the hon. Gentleman, I should be loth to see any more coal than is necessary to provide the reservoir extracted from the area, although my position, like his, would be to oppose opencast working completely on the ground that I am not convinced that, once the first site was worked, it would be easy for the National Coal Board's Opencast Executive to leave it at that. Having got all the equipment on the site, having begun the work, it would then have a very strong argument for going on and completing some of the other sites. I should, therefore, like to oppose the project completely, although I realise that there may be other factors, including the reservoir.
The procedure does not directly affect my constituency, but, as the hon. Gentleman rightly and accurately pointed out, there is a great deal of feeling in the area that the whole thing is cut and dried and sewn up. I make no personal accusations about my right hon. Friend the Minister or about my hon. Friend the Parliamentary Secretary. But the fact must be faced that the people of North Warwickshire must be given some confidence that they will get a proper hearing. At the moment, there are many doubts in their minds.
I realise that it will be difficult for me to press my hon. Friend any further, but I repeat that the miners of North Warwickshire and the residents in my constituency and that of the hon. Member need some confidence. In fact, we


all need some reassurance about this project. I realise that my hon. Friend cannot be too specific, but one of the things which would be of reassurance is to hear that the public inquiry will be open and fair and that every factor which has been mentioned this afternoon will be considered.

4.20 p.m.

The Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Power (Mr. Reginald Free-son): While I appreciate the representations made today by the hon. Member for Meriden (Mr. Speed) and my hon. Friend the Member for Nuneaton (Mr. Leslie Huckfield), both have appreciated that it is not in order for me to discuss most of the points which they raise regarding the National Coal Board's application for the Anker site, as the matter is sub judice. But if, eventually, an opencast authorisation is granted, the Minister will ensure, as far as practicable, by planning conditions, that those who live nearby will not suffer hardship or inconvenience from opencast activities.
The National Coal Board's application for the Anker site involves not only the follow-up construction of a reservoir by the North-East Warwickshire Water Board but provision of a public open space on some of the land which would be temporarily used for spoil. The amount of space so needed would depend on several factors, including the depth of the excavation; and this in turn would influence the amount of land taken by the reservoir, as well as its economics, and the economics of the coal operation and the time taken for construction of the reservoir.
As the Coal Board's application for an authorisation under the Opencast Coal Act, 1958 and the Water Board's application for a Water Order under the Water Act, 1945 have been opposed, they will be subject to public inquiries to ascertain all the facts. We will arrange for the two inquiries to be held together, for the convenience of all concerned. Time and place will be announced soon. Every opportunity will be given to the interested parties to present their views and to state their case, both in written form and, of course, at oral hearings.
In coming to a conclusion on this matter, the Government's White Paper on Fuel Policy still stands, regarding

opencast coal working. The policy was set out in paragraph 119, and amplified not just this year, a few weeks ago, but in a Question from my hon. Friend on 8th December 1967—one or two months after the White Paper—and restated in an Answer which I gave him on 24th March this year. In essence, this was to the effect that, during the present conditions of general coal surplus, new sites will not be authorised except in special cases where, because of special factors additional to fuel policy or because of quality or location, the coal to be produced will not compete with deep mine coals. An important aspect of this case, which I must not pre-judge, is how far special factors relating to the proposed reservoir and amenity provision may justify opencast working.
This is a complicated case, but I assure the House and the public concerned, that it will be looked at carefully from every angle and full account taken of any views at the public inquiry, which will be an elaboration of the points made today.
Since the hon. Gentleman and my hon. Friend, were kind enough to tell me beforehand that they would raise the question of the rumours spreading in the district, I should like to take this opportunity to refute the recent allegations that my right hon. Friend has already agreed that the Coal Board and the Water Board should go ahead with their plans. There is no fait accompli here. The fact that my right hon. Friend has published a notice to suspend rights of way across the Anker site, which may have given rise to these allegations and rumours, if the Coal Board is authorised to work the site, is normal procedure and in no way affects his ultimate decision.
I have checked all the records available in the Department concerning the procedure adopted for applications before and since the White Paper was published. As far as I have been able to ascertain, in no case has such a notice been published after the authorisation. The normal procedure has been for it to be published before, but naturally it does not become effective until the authorisation is given. When deciding on the applications, we consider all the objections sent to my right hon. Friend and the report of the person appointed to conduct the inquiry. My hon. Friend the


Member for Nuneaton and the hon. Member for Meriden expressed understanding of my position. The Minister is in a semi-judicial position. I act for him this afternoon. The matter is sub judice, but it will be dealt with fairly and as fully

as possible. We must await the outcome of the public inquiry which is to be held soon.

Question put and agreed to.

Adjourned accordingly at twenty-seven minutes past Four o'clock.